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单词 Meitner
例句 Meitner
Just enough, Meitner and Frisch calculated, to make a grain of sand jump. Bomb 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z
Meitner pulled out a scrap of paper and pencil, and Frisch sketched a diagram of a circle stretching into a long oval shape, and finally breaking in two. Bomb 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z
Hahn wrote to Meitner at her new office in Sweden, describing the strange results of his experiment. Bomb 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z
Meitner responded immediately, agreeing that the news was amazing, but adding: “We have experienced so many surprises in nuclear physics that one cannot say without hesitation about anything: ‘it’s impossible.’ Bomb 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z
Meitner took the pencil and paper and began working out the math. Bomb 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z
He turned to his former partner, Lise Meitner, a Jewish physicist who’d been forced out of Germany by Hitler. Bomb 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z
Their Austrian Jewish physicist colleague Lise Meitner was then in Sweden, having escaped Nazi Germany the previous July. Letters to the Editor 2018-03-02T05:00:00Z
Ms. Meitner also has a good eye for homey and homely details — her grandmother’s “breath of soup” and bathroom cigarettes — but sometimes succumbs to the prosaic. Books of The Times: The Sting of Salt Air, Old Loves and Honey Bees 2010-10-18T22:29:00Z
At the time, Ms. Meitner was struggling to recover from a Caesarean section and a bacterial infection with their infant son. State of the Unions: From a Couple to Parents 2011-08-11T19:33:45Z
He and Ms. Meitner marvel at how friendly and precocious their son is, traits neither of them possessed as children, and at his obsession with jellyfish and volcanoes. State of the Unions: From a Couple to Parents 2011-08-11T19:33:45Z
Hahn got the Nobel Prize for his discovery, but Meitner did not, although subsequently she was nominated multiple times. Letters to the Editor 2018-02-09T05:00:00Z
Ms. Meitner organizes social events and schedules hikes, kayak and bike rides. State of the Unions: From a Couple to Parents 2011-08-11T19:33:45Z
Hahn was skeptical at first but so was Meitner when Hahn wrote to her about the strange result, which she called “an extensive burst.” Letters to the Editor 2018-03-02T05:00:00Z
And then there is Lise Meitner, the co-discoverer, with Otto Hahn, of nuclear fission. Rosalind Franklin Deserves a Posthumous Nobel Prize for Co-discovering DNA Structure 2023-09-24T04:00:00Z
Meitner's colleague Niels Bohr, presented her work at the 1939 Fifth Washington Conference on Theoretical Physics in D.C. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
But today, we're sharing the story of one who refused to have anything to do with it: physicist Lise Meitner, the scientist whose work was key to the discovery of nuclear fission. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Starting next week, we're bringing you a two-parter, a fresh look at the physicist Lise Meitner through her correspondence with Otto Hahn. They Remembered the Lost Women of the Manhattan Project So That None of Us Would Forget 2023-08-31T04:00:00Z
About three decades later in 1938, Lise Meitner — along with her colleague, Otto Hahn, and her nephew, Otto Frisch — discovered nuclear fission, which would later be used by J. Robert Oppenheimer. Eclipsed genius: Despite modest progress, sexism and racism persist in science 2023-08-12T04:00:00Z
It was Meitner, along with her nephew, Otto Frisch, who proposed the term “fission” to describe what they had found, but Hahn won the prize. Rosalind Franklin Deserves a Posthumous Nobel Prize for Co-discovering DNA Structure 2023-09-24T04:00:00Z
This would lead to a breakdown of Meitner and Hahn’s decades-long scientific collaboration. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
We're diving into one particularly illuminating aspect of Meitner's story: her letters with her closest colleague, Otto Hahn. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Meitner was not the only woman who made a significant contribution during this time. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
After Meitner, who was Jewish, fled Germany during World War II, Hahn published the work in her absence and was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1944. Eclipsed genius: Despite modest progress, sexism and racism persist in science 2023-08-12T04:00:00Z
The discovery of fission, made by two German physicists, Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassman, was quickly verified by two Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany, Lise Meitner and her nephew Otto Frisch. College Physics for AP Courses 2015-08-12T00:00:00Z
Meitner, who had fled Germany because of the Nazis, was horrified at the thought of an atomic bomb. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
While she was working on the Meitner book, Marissa went to the University of Cambridge, in England, where Meitner’s papers are archived. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
But the lack of physics role models like Meitner in popular media leads to real-life consequences. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
Among the products of Meitner, Hahn, and Strassman’s fission reaction were barium, krypton, lanthanum, and cerium, all of which have nuclei that are more stable than uranium-235. Chemistry 2019-02-14T00:00:00Z
Hahn’s female colleague in the fission research, Lise Meitner, was snubbed. Elizabeth Rona, the wandering polonium woman, changed radiation science forever 2020-01-05T05:00:00Z
Today we bring you part two of a two-part episode on physicist Lise Meitner. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
Meitner and Hahn were working at the very edges of scientific understanding. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Meitner doesn’t appear as a character in the film, as she was not part of the Manhattan Project, but we hope the script alludes to her groundbreaking work. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
Element 109 was named in honor of Lise Meitner, who discovered nuclear fission, a phenomenon that would have world-changing impacts; Meitner also contributed to the discovery of some major isotopes, discussed immediately below. Chemistry 2019-02-14T00:00:00Z
In spite of 48 nominations for physics and chemistry, Lise Meitner was never awarded a Nobel prize.Credit: Boosting inclusivity in the Nobels 2019-10-14T04:00:00Z
He's very conscious of the fact that Meitner would, is very likely to have this stolen from her. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
For Meitner, the physicist, the more interesting part was radiation itself. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
More frequent media recognition of female scientists, such as Meitner, could vicariously influence young women, who may see them as role models. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
Lise Meitner, who helped split the atom, never received the Nobel prize despite being nominated 48 times. What's the point of Nobel prizes? 2019-10-07T04:00:00Z
I am an active member of the Lise Meitner Society, and we work to promote the rights of women and minorities in science and mathematics. British chemist battles xenophobia in Germany 2019-03-26T04:00:00Z
Niels Bohr was worried even then, and made a point of stressing Meitner’s incredible interpretation of results that had so confused Otto Hahn. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
Meitner followed every new discovery and presented her own findings at conferences. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
The Manhattan Project would not have been possible without the work of physicist Lise Meitner, who discovered nuclear fission. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
And Ruth Lewin Sime, chemist and author of the 1996 Lise Meitner: A Life in Physics, provides historical context on the status of the vanishingly rare female scientists of that era. The debated legacy of Einstein’s first wife 2019-03-04T05:00:00Z
The pair’s discovery was eventually acknowledged as the first because Meitner and Hahn had collected more of the substance and characterized it more completely than their competitors had. Celebrate the women behind the periodic table 2019-01-27T05:00:00Z
Katie Hafner: Meitner would get letters from Bohr and Frisch, but throughout the war, the two men had to keep quiet about what they were working on. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
Meitner and Einstein became friends and lifelong correspondents. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Einstein called Meitner the “Madame Curie of Germany” and was one of a pantheon of physicists, from Max Planck to Niels Bohr, who nominated Meitner for a Nobel Prize 48 times during her lifetime. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
In a twist of historical fate, Adolf Hitler’s rise coincided with major breakthroughs in particle physics, including the theorization of nuclear fission by Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch in December 1938. Atomic bombs through wars hot and cold 2018-10-14T04:00:00Z
Then, in 1938, Meitner and Hahn realized that one of the elements Fermi had made was barium, and that the uranium nucleus had indeed split. Celebrate the women behind the periodic table 2019-01-27T05:00:00Z
Meitner was dubbed “the mother of the atomic bomb.” How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
In Berlin, Meitner was finally building a scientific community. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Of Jewish descent, Meitner had been forced to flee the Nazis in 1938 and refused to use this scientific discovery to develop a bomb. Female Physicists Aren’t Represented in the Media—And This Lack of Representation Hurts the Field 2023-07-17T04:00:00Z
It’s a historic crime against womankind that the great genius Lise Meitner doesn’t get her due in these retold stories. Calendar Letters: Linda Ronstadt fans say thanks for the memories - Los Angeles Times 2018-10-13T04:00:00Z
Hahn and Meitner discovered protactinium while they were looking for the ‘mother substance’ of actinium in the radioactive decay series. Celebrate the women behind the periodic table 2019-01-27T05:00:00Z
In 1947, Hahn also invited Meitner to return to Berlin, offering her a position as the head of physics at the old KWI, now called the Max Planck Institute. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
And finally, Meitner was given a title – scientific associate – and a salary, albeit a tiny one. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Dmitri Mendeleev, creator of the periodic table of elements, and Lise Meitner, who discovered nuclear fission, should have won Nobels but did not. Why Nobel prizes fail 21st-century science 2018-09-30T04:00:00Z
Second, credit for the discovery of nuclear fission was, in my opinion, more complex than Fouquet implies and not attributable solely to physicist Lise Meitner. Pioneering women in energy physics 2018-06-12T04:00:00Z
By that time, in the run-up to the Second World War, Meitner, being Jewish, had fled to Sweden. Celebrate the women behind the periodic table 2019-01-27T05:00:00Z
We continue the story of Jewish physicist Lise Meitner, the first person to understand that the atom had been split. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
In the decade that followed, Meitner and Hahn did some of their most exciting research. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
But he fails to mention the women who helped to revolutionize the field — from discoverer of nuclear fission Lise Meitner to solar-power pioneer Mária Telkes. The triumphs and tragedies in energy history 2018-05-07T04:00:00Z
One effort is MPG's Lise Meitner excellence program, launched late last year, which will establish up to 10 new research groups led by women every year. Do you want to direct a research institute? Germany's Max Planck Society has hundreds of top jobs to fill 2018-03-15T04:00:00Z
Meitner was Austrian and had left for Germany after her PhD to improve her career opportunities. Celebrate the women behind the periodic table 2019-01-27T05:00:00Z
The letters show the fraught and complex relationship between Otto Hahn and Meitner, and the role that antisemitism played in the decision to give the Nobel Prize in 1944 to Hahn and not to Meitner. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
In 1933, the same year Hitler became chancellor, Meitner lost her university position. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Lise Meitner was a pioneer in the fields of radioactivity and nuclear physics. Women in Science are a Force of Nature 2018-03-08T05:00:00Z
Lise Meitner was a pioneer in the fields of radioactivity and nuclear physics. Women in Science are a Force of Nature 2017-12-13T05:00:00Z
Over Christmas vacation in 1938, physicists Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch received puzzling scientific news in a private letter from nuclear chemist Otto Hahn. Atomic Age Began 75 Years Ago with the First Controlled Nuclear Chain Reaction 2017-12-03T05:00:00Z
After the discovery of nuclear fission, Meitner grappled with its implication: the advent of nuclear weapons and who would get credit for the discovery of nuclear fission. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
By the middle of the 1930s, most of Meitner's Jewish colleagues had left Berlin, but Meitner stayed. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Hahn and Meitner made great strides in their work on radioactivity, which led to a quick succession of papers: three papers in 1908 and six in 1909. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
Indeed, science itself is an establishment rooted in exclusion, writes science journalist Saini, citing a long history of unrecognized achievement by women scientists: Lise Meitner, Rosalind Franklin and Emmy Noether, to name a few. Daring Apollo 8 Astronauts, Rediscovering a Forgotten Math Genius and Other New Science Books 2017-06-14T04:00:00Z
Ms. Meitner said that as a leader of small poetry seminars, she knew a lot about her students’ private lives. Political Divide on Campuses Hardens After Trump’s Victory 2016-12-08T05:00:00Z
Although Meitner did finally escape Berlin, she left behind the work that had defined her life for nearly three decades: her work with chemist Otto Hahn. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
Annexation meant that Meitner was suddenly stateless, her Austrian passport meaningless. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
However, Meitner was interested in doing scientific research as well and began a collaboration with Otto Hahn. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
"Lise Meitner was really the chemist who spotted nuclear fission but she was never really recognised for it because she was Jewish and a woman," says Sella. Who, What, Why: How do elements get their names? - BBC News 2016-01-04T05:00:00Z
But Hahn published their findings without including Meitner as a co-author. The women who science forgot - BBC News 2015-06-18T04:00:00Z
Meitner, a physicist, was the first to realize what the results meant: the nucleus had split. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
They waited to tell Hahn until the day before Meitner was due to leave. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Here, Meitner worked without pay as a “guest physicist,” and a year later, her position became permanent. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
Lise Meitner, when her male colleagues got all the glory for her work on nuclear fission. Nobel Scientist's Sexist Remarks Provoke Outrage 2015-06-10T04:00:00Z
After moving to Berlin in 1907, Meitner collaborated with chemist Otto Hahn over many decades. The women who science forgot - BBC News 2015-06-18T04:00:00Z
Putting together Hahn and Strassman’s lab work with Meitner and Frisch’s explanation presented extraordinary possibilities. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
It would give Hahn and Meitner a chance to say goodbye to each other. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Around that same time, Meitner and Hahn discovered the isotope protactinium, which won Meitner the Leibniz Medal. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
And like their foreign colleagues, including Austrian physicist Lise Meitner and Marie Curie, British female scientists volunteered as radiologists. Women in science: A temporary liberation 2014-07-01T04:00:00Z
Unlike Curie, who was showered with two Nobel Prizes, Meitner was massively snubbed when her collaborator, Otto Hahn, took home a solo Nobel in physics for their work. 15 Works of Art Depicting Women in Science 2014-03-07T21:00:00Z
But for Meitner and Hahn, the discovery that should have been the culmination of decades of collaboration, instead tested their relationship and threatened their trust in each other. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
At the institute, Hahn marked his calendar with an entry reading "Meitner goes to Vienna". She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
In 1926, Meitner became the first woman in Germany to be made a full professor. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
Frisch and Meitner told Niels Bohr, the great Danish physicist, and followed up with confirming physical experiments published in the British journal Nature. Why Did We Make The Atomic Bomb? 2013-12-07T19:00:00Z
Both Marie Curie and German-born physicist Lise Meitner were responsible for some of the most important physics of the 20th century. 15 Works of Art Depicting Women in Science 2014-03-07T21:00:00Z
And it's why the physicists at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute were furious when they found out he was still sending his experiments to Meitner. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
Marissa Moss: And he shows his papers and his visas and he's Dutch and he's going back to the Netherlands, and Meitner is just absolutely frozen. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
While the celebrity Meitner deserved was blatantly denied her, an undeserved association with the atomic bomb was bestowed. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
De had trained in Germany with Hahn and Meitner in the 1920s and like Allison, used monazite sand for his research. A Tale of 7 Elements: Element 85 Astatine [Excerpt] 2013-07-05T14:15:00.623Z
My heroes are Lise Meitner and Otto Hahn because they showed what is possible if two brilliant minds from two different scientific disciplines work together on one project. 30 under 30: Exploring the Atomic Roots of Magnetism 2013-06-14T17:45:00.157Z
Meitner and Hahn's discovery of nuclear fission also opened up the possibility of an atomic bomb. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
By August of 1938, Meitner was settled in Stockholm and Hahn announced to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute that she had retired. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
It was a perfect match, with Hahn as the experimental chemist and Meitner as the theoretical physicist. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
Take Lise Meitner, an Austrian-born physicist who was instrumental in discovering nuclear fission with Otto Hahn but who did not share his 1944 Nobel Prize for it. Special Report: The Female Factor: Risk and Opportunity for Women in 21st-Century Challenges 2010-03-05T20:36:00Z
"And Marie Curie and Lise Meitner would be Wac corporals," Karen added. The Mercenaries
As for Meitner, initially she wasn't worried about the prospect of a bomb. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
In the same letter, Meitner asks Hahn to send her the materials and books she had to leave behind. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
The Germans appealed to Meitner for an explanation—and she provided one in full. Honoring a Pioneering Woman in Physics 2017-08-29T04:00:00Z
In the meantime, Meitner was determined to puzzle out those results. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Otto Robert Frisch, who's Meitner's nephew, who is also a physicist and has been working with Niels Bohr in his lab in Copenhagen, he comes to visit his aunt. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Marissa Moss: Almost all, every single major physicist, German physicist, goes to America to work on this project with two very notable exceptions, Einstein and Meitner. How Antisemitism and Professional Betrayal Marred Lise Meitner’s Scientific Legacy 2023-09-14T04:00:00Z
In November of 1938, Meitner got the news that her sister's husband had been arrested and sent to Dachau, one of the first concentration camps. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Katie Hafner: Meitner thinks back to what she knows about the structure of the atom and the nature of mass and energy. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
But imagine for a moment what it was like for Meitner and her nephew. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Marissa Moss: But Meitner realizes there's something holding together the nucleus, like what holds together a drop of water. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Katie Hafner: Meitner's realization drew upon recent work that Niels Bohr and other scientists had been doing on the structure of the atom. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Alone and anxious about her family, Meitner tried to build a life in Stockholm. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Meitner realized that the nucleus was not indivisible after all. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Meitner is looking at what's there and trying to explain what is this, and that's how she comes up with this discovery. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Meitner and Frisch submitted theirs only ten days later. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
And throughout, Hahn and Meitner were furiously sending letters back and forth to each other. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
He wrote to Meitner, “perhaps you can suggest some fantastic explanation.” She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Katie Hafner: As Marissa Moss sees it, these letters show not only the breakdown in Hahn and Meitner's relationship -- they reveal that Hahn was increasingly concerned about his reputation and standing as a scientist. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
As a Jew, Meitner could not access her pension – the assets had been seized. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Meitner herself considered accepting a position at Cambridge, but that September, Germany invaded Poland and war was declared. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
Time and again, the letters reveal Meitner’s struggle to communicate with a man alongside whom she had worked for nearly three decades, a man she had cherished as a friend. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
But the results seemed important enough to merit swift publication, even without Meitner's interpretation. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
As the Nazis rose to power in Germany, Hahn was able to preserve his position, while Meitner, a woman and Jewish, could not. She Cracked the Mystery of How to Split the Atom, But Someone Else Got the Nobel Prize for the Discovery 2023-09-07T04:00:00Z
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