Tuesday, 8 November 2016

November 8 is reserved to Darleane C. Hoffman


November 8 is reserved to Darleane C. Hoffman
Happy 90th birthday Darleane C. Hoffman! The nuclear chemist was born in Terril, Iowa, in 1926. She entered Iowa State College as an art major; by the time she left, she had received her bachelor's and doctoral degrees in chemistry. She and her husband then went to work in nuclear chemistry at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.

Hoffman made her mark studying atoms of some of the heaviest elements on the periodic table. In 1971 she discovered plutonium in billion-year-old rock, proving that small amounts of elements heavier than uranium occur in nature. She made important observations of atoms of dubnium and lawrencium, which decay in a matter of minutes or seconds. And she discovered that atoms of the element fermium (atomic number 100) can undergo nuclear fission spontaneously, without being bombarded by a particle such as a neutron.

Hoffman then moved to the University of California, Berkeley, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where she discovered new super-heavy elements with Glenn Seaborg. She has also investigated safety procedures at nuclear weapon test sites and radioactive waste storage facilities. Hoffman was awarded the National Medal of Science in 1997.

References:
http://www.add.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/exhibits/20thWomen/Listpages/hoffman1.html
http://chemistry.berkeley.edu/faculty/chem/emeriti/hoffman

Photo:
American Chemical Society Award for Nuclear Chemistry
Presented by Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg to Dr. Darleane C. Hoffman

#history   #womeninSTEM   #chemistry   #science

1 comment:

  1. See what the cornfields can produce. :) well done ma'am

    ReplyDelete