-40%

"Nobel Prize in Chemistry" Harry Kroto Signed 4X7 Embossed Card Todd Mueller COA

$ 52.79

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    Up for auction the
    "Nobel Prize in Chemistry" Harry Kroto Signed 4X7 Embossed Card.
    This
    item
    is certified authentic by Todd Mueller Autographs and comes with their Certificate of Authenticity.
    ES-6261
    Sir Harold Walter Kroto
    FRS
    (born
    Harold Walter Krotoschiner
    ; 7 October 1939 – 30 April 2016), known as
    Harry Kroto
    , was an English
    chemist
    . He shared the 1996
    Nobel Prize in Chemistry
    with
    Robert Curl
    and
    Richard Smalley
    for their discovery of
    fullerenes
    . He was the recipient of many other honors and awards. Kroto held many positions in academia throughout his life, ending his career as the Francis Eppes Professor of Chemistry at
    Florida State University
    , which he joined in 2004. Prior to this, he spent approximately 40 years at the
    University of Sussex
    .
    Kroto promoted science education and was a critic of religious faith. Kroto was born in
    Wisbech
    ,
    Cambridgeshire
    , England, to Edith and Heinz Krotoschiner, his name being of
    Silesian
    origin. His father's family came from
    Bojanowo
    , Poland, and his mother's from Berlin. Both of his parents were born in Berlin and fled to Great Britain in the 1930s as
    refugees
    from Nazi Germany; his father was
    Jewish
    . Harry was raised in
    Bolton
    while the British authorities interned his father on the
    Isle of Man
    as an
    enemy alien
    during World War II and attended
    Bolton School
    , where he was a contemporary of the actor
    Ian McKellen
    . In 1955, Harold's father shortened the family name to Kroto.
    As a child, he became fascinated by a
    Meccano
    set. Kroto credited Meccano, as well as his aiding his father in the latter's balloon factory after World War II – amongst other things – with developing skills useful in scientific
    research
    . He developed an interest in
    chemistry
    ,
    physics
    , and
    mathematics
    in secondary school, and because his
    sixth form
    chemistry teacher (
    Harry Heaney
    – who subsequently became a university professor) felt that the
    University of Sheffield
    had the best chemistry department in the United Kingdom, he went to Sheffield. Although raised Jewish, Harry Kroto stated that religion never made any sense to him. He was a humanist who claimed to have three religions: Amnesty Internationalism, atheism, and humour. He was a distinguished supporter of the
    British Humanist Association
    . In 2003 he was one of 22 Nobel Laureates who signed the
    Humanist Manifesto
    .  In 2015, Kroto signed the
    Mainau Declaration 2015 on Climate Change
    on the final day of the 65th
    Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting
    . The declaration was signed by a total of 76 Nobel Laureates and handed to then-President of the French Republic,
    François Hollande
    , as part of the successful
    COP21 climate summit
    in Paris. Kroto was educated at Bolton School and went to the University of Sheffield in 1958, where he obtained a first-class honours BSc degree in Chemistry (1961) and a PhD in Molecular Spectroscopy (1964). During his time at Sheffield he also was the art editor of
    Arrows
    – the University student magazine, played tennis for the University team (reaching the UAU finals twice) and was President of the Student Athletics Council (1963–64). Among other things such as making the first
    phosphaalkenes
    (compounds with carbon phosphorus double bonds), his doctoral studies included unpublished research on
    carbon suboxide
    , O=C=C=C=O, and this led to a general interest in
    molecules
    containing chains of carbon atoms with numerous multiple bonds. He started his work with an interest in
    organic chemistry
    , but when he learned about
    spectroscopy
    it inclined him towards
    quantum chemistry
    ; he later developed an interest in
    astrochemistry
    .
    After obtaining his PhD, Kroto spent two-years in a postdoctoral position at the
    National Research Council
    in Ottawa, Canada carrying out further work in molecular spectroscopy, and also spent the subsequent year at
    Bell Laboratories
    in New Jersey (1966–1967) carrying out Raman studies of liquid phase interactions and worked on quantum chemistry.