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Template:Spanish name
Manuel Ballester Boix (born in Barcelona on June 27, 1919; died April 5, 2005) was a Spanish chemist.
Biography
He received his degree at the University of Barcelona in 1944, his doctorate in Madrid, and finished his training at Harvard University in 1951.[1] In 1944 he formed a team at the Spanish National Research Council. His work has largely been in kinetics and organic chemistry.[2]
Awards
References
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Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research |
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- 1981: Alberto Sols
- 1982: Manuel Ballester
- 1983: Luis Antonio Santaló Sors
- 1984: Antonio Garcia-Bellido
- 1985: David Vázquez Martínez and Emilio Rosenblueth
- 1986: Antonio González González
- 1987: Jacinto Convit and Pablo Rudomín
- 1988: Manuel Cardona and Marcos Moshinsky
- 1989: Guido Münch
- 1990: Santiago Grisolía and Salvador Moncada
- 1991: Francisco Bolívar Zapata
- 1992: Federico García Moliner
- 1993: Amable Liñán
- 1994: Manuel Patarroyo
- 1995: Manuel Losada Villasante and Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad of Costa Rica
- 1996: Valentín Fuster
- 1997: Atapuerca research team
- 1998: Emilio Méndez Pérez and Pedro Miguel Echenique Landiríbar
- 1999: Ricardo Miledi and Enrique Moreno González
- 2000: Robert Gallo and Luc Montagnier
- 2001: Craig Venter, John Sulston, Francis Collins, Hamilton Smith and Jean Weissenbach
- 2002: Lawrence Roberts, Robert E. Kahn, Vinton Cerf and Tim Berners-Lee
- 2003: Jane Goodall
- 2004: Judah Folkman, Tony Hunter, Joan Massagué, Bert Vogelstein and Robert Weinberg
- 2005: Antonio Damasio
- 2006: Juan Ignacio Cirac
- 2007: Peter Lawrence and Ginés Morata
- 2008: Sumio Iijima, Shuji Nakamura, Robert Langer, George M. Whitesides and Tobin Marks
- 2009: Martin Cooper and Raymond Tomlinson
- 2010: David Julius, Baruch Minke and Linda Watkins
- 2011: Joseph Altman, Arturo Álvarez-Buylla and Giacomo Rizzolatti
- 2012: Gregory Winter and Richard A. Lerner
- 2013: Peter Higgs, François Englert and European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN
- 2014: Avelino Corma Canós, Mark E. Davis and Galen D. Stucky
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Princess of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research |
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- 2015: Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer Doudna
- 2016: Hugh Herr
- 2017: Rainer Weiss, Kip S. Thorne, Barry C. Barish and the LIGO Scientific Collaboration
- 2018: Svante Pääbo
- 2019: Joanne Chory and Sandra Myrna Díaz
- 2020: Yves Meyer, Ingrid Daubechies, Terence Tao and Emmanuel Candès
- 2021: Katalin Karikó, Drew Weissman, Philip Felgner, Uğur Şahin, Özlem Türeci, Derrick Rossi and Sarah Gilbert
- 2022: Geoffrey Hinton, Yann LeCun, Yoshua Bengio and Demis Hassabis
- 2023: Jeffrey I. Gordon, Everett Peter Greenberg and Bonnie Bassler
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