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  1. 7. Juni 2020 · On June 7, 1896, American physicist, chemist, and Nobel Laureate Robert Sonderson Mulliken was born. He is primarily responsible for the early development of molecular orbital theory, i.e. the elaboration of the molecular orbital method of computing the structure of molecules. “…the more accurate the calculations became, the more the ...

  2. Abstract. Robert Mulliken was Ernest DeWitt Burton Distinguished Service Professor of Physics and Chemistry at Universiy of Chicago (1961-1986). Other institutional affiliations include New York University. His research interests included valence theory and molecular structure. In 1966, Mulliken won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

  3. Robert S. Mulliken (1896-1986) was an American physical chemist and winner of the 1966 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is best known for his work in developing the molecular orbital theory of molecular structure.Mulliken was named to the Advisory Committee on Uranium Research at the National Academy of Sciences in…

  4. R OBERT S. MULLIKEN WAS a quiet, soft-spoken man, yet so single-minded and determined in his devotion to under-standing molecules that he came to be called “Mr. Molecule.”. If any single person’s ideas and teachings dominated the development of our understanding of molecular structure and spectra, it surely was Robert Mulliken.

  5. 7 June 1896—31 October 1986. ROBERT SANDERSON MULLIKEN was born on 7 June 1896 in Newburyport, Rhode Island. His father, Samuel Parsons Mulliken, was a Professor of Organic Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to which he would travel a distance of some 30 miles every day on the Boston and Maine Railroad. Samuel’s income ...

  6. Robert S. Mulliken. Robert Sanderson Mulliken (June 7, 1896 – October 31, 1986) was an American physicist and chemist. He was responsible for the early development of molecular orbital theory. [1] Robert Mulliken. Born. Robert Sanderson Mulliken. June 7, 1896. Newburyport, Massachusetts, U.S.

  7. The papers of Robert S. Mulliken, comprising 63 linear feet, document most aspects of his long and successful career in the field of chemical physics from the 1920s through 1985. They include correspondence, lectures and writings, research and teaching materials, and files from his affiliations at the University of Chicago and with other scientific organizations.