Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 12. Sept. 2020 · August Krogh twice won the prestigious international Steegen Prize, for nitrogen metabolism (1906) and overturning the concept of active transport of gases across the pulmonary epithelium (1910). Despite this, at the beginning of 1920, the consummate experimentalist was relatively unknown worldwide and even among his own University of ...

  2. August Krogh (Schack August Steenberg Krogh, 15 November 1874 – 13 September 1949) was a Danish zoologist. He won the 1920 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine , for his discoveries about capillaries .

  3. Kapitel4. Fadermordet. Fadermordet. August Krogh står som de fleste forskere på skuldrene af tidligere forskere. Hans læremester – den verdenskendte danske fysiolog Christian Bohr – ser talentet i den unge Krogh og inviterer ham indenfor i sit laboratorium. Desværre ender det frugtbare samarbejde i en følelsesladet skilsmisse.

  4. August Krogh (1874-1949) var professor i zoofysiologi ved Københavns Universitet og huskes som en af de mest markante danske naturvidenskabsmænd i det 20. århundrede. Han modtog i 1920 nobelprisen i fysiologi eller medicin, og som følge af hædersbevisningen var han i 1922 på forelæsningsrække i USA, da han – via Marie, som var med på turen og selv havde diabetes – blev opmærksom ...

  5. 1. März 2021 · August Krogh (1874–1949) was amongst the most influential physiologists in the first part of the 20th century. This was an era when physiology emerged as a quantitative research field and when many of the current physiological disciplines were defined; Krogh can rightfully be viewed as having introduced comparative physiology, epithelial transport and – together with Johannes Lindhard ...

  6. August Krogh Club From molecule to organism Science initiative in Metabolism and Molecular Physiology. Lige nu. Symposium. Symposium: Crossroads in Metabolism: Tales from Talents & Trailblazers . Royal Danish Academy of Science and Letters, Copenhagen, De ...

  7. 27. Aug. 2020 · When Krogh persuaded the Rockefeller Foundation to provide $300,000 to help build and equip a Physiological Institute in Copenhagen (later moved to the Krogh Institute in 1970), he insisted that, for his personal laboratories ‘I want limited space, as an excuse to say no to people I don't want’ (Schmidt-Nielsen, 1995, p. 141). Rather than gushing with gratitude for his sponsors, the marble ...