KAREN KAVANAGH

KAREN KAVANAGH

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Teeny Ted from Turnip Town

Teeny Ted from Turnip Town (2007), published by Robert Chaplin, is certified by Guinness World Records as the world's smallest reproduction of a printed book. The book was produced in the Nano Imaging Laboratory at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with the assistance of SFU scientists Li Yang and Karen Kavanagh. The book's size is 0.07 mm x 0.10 mm. The letters are carved into 30 microtablets on a polished piece of single crystalline silicon, using a focused-gallium-ion beam with a minimum diameter of 7 nanometers (this was compared to the head of a pin at 2 mm, 2,000,000 nm, across). The book has its own ISBN, 978-1-894897-17-4. The story was written by Malcolm Douglas Chaplin and is "a fable about Teeny Ted's victory in the turnip contest at the annual county fair." The book has been published in a limited edition of 100 copies by the laboratory and requires a scanning electron microscope to read the text. In December 2012, a Library Edition of the book was published with a full title of Teeny Ted from Turnip Town & the Tale of Scale: A Scientific Book of Word Puzzles and an ISBN 978-1-894897-36-5. On the title page it is referred to as the "Large Print Edition of the World's Smallest Book". The book was published using funds from a successful Kickstarter campaign with contributors' names shown on the dust jacket.

In connection with: Teeny Ted from Turnip Town

Teeny

Ted

from

Turnip

Town

Title combos: Town from Town Turnip from Teeny from Ted Turnip

Description combos: of was from nm carved with of Malcolm 2007

Karen Kavanagh thumbnail

Karen Kavanagh

Karen L. Kavanagh is a professor of physics at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, where she heads the Kavanagh Lab, a research lab working on semiconductor nanoscience.

In connection with: Karen Kavanagh

Karen

Kavanagh

Title combos: Kavanagh Karen

Description combos: working Lab Kavanagh where of Simon Karen Burnaby Fraser

Kavanagh (surname) thumbnail

Kavanagh (surname)

Kavanagh or Kavanaugh is a surname of Irish origin, Caomhánach in Irish. It is one of the few Irish surnames that does not traditionally have an Ó/O or a Mac/Mc in either English or Irish (as it is an adjectival or descriptive surname). "Ach" is a suffix meaning "related to, having, characterised by, prone to" or "person or thing connected or involved with, belonging to, having". Caomhánach means relating to or belonging to Caomhán. The first Kavanagh (Domhnall Caomhánach) was fostered by the coarb at St. Caomhan's abbey. It is also known as Mac Murchadha Caomhánach (an example of an Irish agnomen; see Ó Catharnaigh Sionnach or Fox of Fir Teathbha), but is often now rendered 'Caomhánach'. Rarely it is referred to as 'Ó Caomhánaigh' or 'Ní Caomhánaigh'.

In connection with: Kavanagh (surname)

Kavanagh

surname

Title combos: surname Kavanagh

Description combos: Caomhánach or it Domhnall Ach also either as or

Presidential Young Investigator Award

The Presidential Young Investigator Award (PYI) was awarded by the National Science Foundation of the United States Federal Government. The program operated from 1984 to 1991, and was replaced by the NSF Young Investigator (NYI) Awards and Presidential Faculty Fellows (PFF) program. In 1995, the NSF Young Investigator program was subsumed into the NSF CAREER Awards program, and in 1996, the Presidential Faculty Fellows program was replaced by the PECASE program. Applicants could not directly apply for the award, but were nominated by others including their own institutions based on their previous record of scientific achievement. The award, a certificate from the White House signed by the President of the United States, included a minimum grant of $25,000 a year for five years from NSF to be used for any scientific research project the awardee wished to pursue, with the possibility of additional funding up to $100,000 annually if the PYI obtained matching funds from industry. Considered to be one of the highest honors granted by the National Science Foundation, the award program was criticized in 1990 as not being the best use of NSF funds in an era of tight budgets. At least one awardee has also won a Nobel Prize. For example, Frances Arnold, winner of this award in 1989, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2018.

In connection with: Presidential Young Investigator Award

Presidential

Young

Investigator

Award

Title combos: Presidential Young Investigator Young Award Award Investigator Young Presidential

Description combos: by Investigator and Young States the the into and

Index of women scientists articles

No description available.

In connection with: Index of women scientists articles

Index

of

women

scientists

articles

Title combos: of women Index of women women of articles scientists

Description combos: available No description available No

Christine Kavanagh

Christine Mary Kavanagh (born 24 March 1957) is an English actress.

In connection with: Christine Kavanagh

Christine

Kavanagh

Title combos: Kavanagh Christine

Description combos: actress is Kavanagh an Mary 1957 born Christine March

Lauren Rohwer

Lauren Elizabeth Shea Rohwer is an American scientist. She is a principal member of the technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories. Rohwer researches synthesis and characterization of nanoscale luminescent materials with applications to solid-state lighting.

In connection with: Lauren Rohwer

Lauren

Rohwer

Title combos: Rohwer Lauren

Description combos: Rohwer characterization National of Lauren characterization the of Shea

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