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List of inventions and discoveries by women

This page aims to list inventions and discoveries in which women played a major role.

Medicine edit

Diseases edit

Chemotherapy
Jane Cooke Wright (1919–2013) was an oncologist who pioneered the use of chemotherapy with the drug methotrexate to treat breast cancer and skin cancer (mycosis fungoids).
HIV
Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Luc Montaigner discovered HIV, the cause of AIDS.[1]

Pharmaceuticals edit

Aciclovir
Gertrude B. Elion contributed to the development of aciclovir, an antiviral drug used for the treatment of herpes simplex virus infections, chickenpox, and shingles.[2]
Artemisinin and dihydroartemisinin
Tu Youyou discovered artemisinin and dihydroartemisinin, both now standard treatments for malaria. Artemisinin is isolated from the plant Artemisia annua, sweet wormwood, a herb employed in Chinese traditional medicine.[3]
Azathioprine
Azathioprine is an Immunosuppressive drug used in rheumatoid arthritis, granulomatosis with polyangiitis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and in kidney transplants to prevent rejection first synthesized by George H. Hitchings and Gertrude B. Elion in 1957 .[4][5][6]
Mercaptopurine
Mercaptopurine is a medication for cancer and autoimmune diseases including acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis. It was discovered by Gertrude B. Elion and George H. Hitchings.[7]
Pyrimethamine
Pyrimethamine, sold under the trade name Daraprim, is an anti-parasitic medication used to treat a variety of conditions including toxoplasmosis and isosporiasis. Pyrimethamine was initially developed by Nobel Prize winning scientist Gertrude Elion as a treatment for malaria.[8][9]
AZT
Gertrude Elion made foundational contributions to the development of AZT, one of the first antiretroviral medications used in the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS.[10]
Vitamin E
Katharine Bishop and Herbert McLean Evans co-discovered Vitamin E while studying the reproductive cycle of rats.

Pediatrics edit

 
Virginia Apgar[11]
Apgar score
Invented in 1952 by Virginia Apgar.
Disposable diapers
The first disposable diaper was invented in 1946 by Marion Donovan, a professional-turned-housewife who wanted to ensure her children's cloth diapers remained dry while they slept.[12] Donovan patented her design (called 'Boaters') in 1951. She also invented the first paper diapers, but executives did not invest in this idea and it was consequently scrapped for over ten years, until Procter & Gamble used Donovan's design ideas to create Pampers.
Another diaper design was created by Valerie Hunter Gordon (née de Ferranti), who patented it in 1948.[13][14]
Child carriers
Snugli and Weego were invented by nurse and peacekeeper Ann Moore first in the 1960s.
Pertussis
A pioneering female American doctor, medical researcher and an outspoken voice in the pediatric community, the supercentenarian Leila Alice Denmark (1898–2012) is credited as co-developer of the pertussis (whooping cough) vaccine.[citation needed]

Astronomy and astrophysics edit

Harvard Stellar Classification Scheme
The first classification of stars based on their temperature, created by Annie Jump Cannon, used in publications up to 1924.
Pulsars
Rapidly rotating neutron stars discovered by Jocelyn Bell Burnell in 1967.
The galaxy rotation problem
A major piece of evidence for the presence of dark matter in the Universe, discovered by Vera Rubin from observations of galactic rotation curves in the 1970s.
Stars luminosity
Henrietta Swan Leavitt was an American astronomer who discovered the relation between the luminosity and the period of Cepheid variable stars at the beginning of 20th century.
Merieme Chadid is a French and Moroccan astronomer and explorer who discovered hypersonic shock waves in variable stars as well as the first astronomer committed to install a large observatory at the heart of Antarctica towards an understanding of stellar evolution in the Universe by leading scientific polar explorations.
Radio astronomy
Ruby Violet Payne-Scott was an Australian pioneer in radiophysics and radio astronomy as well as the first female radio astronomer[15] discovering Type I and Type III solar radio bursts.
Stars are primarily composed of hydrogen and helium
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin found in her 1925 PhD thesis that stars are primarily composed of hydrogen and helium. Thus, her thesis established that hydrogen is the most abundant element in the Universe.[16]
When Payne's dissertation was reviewed, astronomer Henry Norris Russell dissuaded her from concluding that the composition of the Sun was predominantly hydrogen and thus very different from that of the Earth, as it contradicted the accepted wisdom at the time. She consequently described the result in her thesis as "spurious".[16] Russell realized she was correct four years later after having derived the same result by different means and publishing it in 1929. He acknowledged Payne's work and discovery admiringly in his paper but he is often credited for the conclusions they both reached.[17][18][19]
The new outer arm of the Milky Way
In 2004, astrophysicist and radio astronomer Naomi McClure-Griffiths identified a new spiral arm of the Milky Way galaxy.[20]
 
PIA19341-MilkyWayGalaxy-SpiralArmsData-WISE-20150603

Physics edit

Radiation
Marie Curie (born Maria Salomea Skłodowska) was the first woman to receive a Nobel prize for her works on radiations and, up until today,[when?] the only woman to receive two Nobel prizes (among them, one Nobel prize in chemistry for discoveries on polonium and radium). She is the sole laureate to be recognized within two distinct scientific areas.
Fanny Gates further investigated the properties of radiation. Together with Ernest Rutherford, she amassed evidence that radioactivity was not the result of any simple chemical or physical processes.[21] In particular, Gates showed that radioactivity could not be destroyed by heat or ionization due to chemical reactions, and that radioactive materials differ from phosphorescent materials both qualitatively and quantitatively.[22]
Radon
In 1901, Harriet Brooks and Ernest Rutherford contributed to the discovery of the element radon by finding evidence that the "emanation" emitted by thorium compounds was likely to be a gas.[23] This follows work in 1899 by Pierre and Marie Curie, who observed that the gas emitted by radium remained radioactive for a month.[24]
Kinetic energy
Emilie du Châtelet (born Gabrielle Émilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil) translated Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica from Latin to French during the 18th century. She carried out physics experiments, popularizing the work of Leibniz. She demonstrated that the kinetic energy of an object was proportional to its mass and the square of its velocity, and postulated a conservation law for the total energy of a system.
Heavy elements in cosmic radiation
As a graduate student, Phyllis S. Freier found evidence for the existence of elements heavier than helium in cosmic radiation. Her work was published in Physical Review in 1948 with co-authors Edward J. Lofgren, Edward P. Ney, and Frank Oppenheimer.[25]
Beta particles are electrons.
Gertrude Scharff Goldhaber and her husband Maurice Goldhaber showed that beta particles were identical to electrons.[26]
Top quark
Melissa Franklin's team at Fermilab found some of the first evidence for the existence of the top quark.[27]
Nuclear shell
Maria Goeppert Mayer, a German immigrant to the US who studied at Johns Hopkins during the Great Depression, persisted in her studies even when no university would employ her and became a chemical physicist. Her most-famous contribution to modern physics was discovering the nuclear shell of the atomic nucleus, for which she won the Nobel Prize in 1963.
Slow light
Lene Hau led a Harvard University team who used a Bose–Einstein condensate to slow down a beam of light to about 17 metres per second, and, in 2001, was able to stop a beam completely.[28]
Astatine
The Austrian physicist Berta Karlik discovered that the element 85 astatine is a product of the natural decay processes.[29]
Bohr–van Leeuwen theorem
In her 1919 thesis,[30][31] Hendrika Johanna van Leeuwen explained why magnetism is an essentially quantum mechanical effect, a result now referred to as the Bohr–van Leeuwen theorem. (Niels Bohr had arrived at the same conclusion a few years earlier.)
Francium
In 1939, Marguerite Perey, a student of Marie Curie, discovered the element francium by purifying samples of lanthanum that contained actinium. Perey first noticed that the actinium she purified was emitting unexpected radiation. After further study she was able to isolate this new element which she named "francium" for France.[32]
Nuclear fission
Austrian–Swedish physicist Lise Meitner, together with Otto Hahn and Otto Robert Frisch, led the small group of scientists who first discovered nuclear fission of uranium when it absorbed an extra neutron. The results were published in early 1939.[8][33] Meitner, Hahn and Frisch understood that the fission process, which splits the atomic nucleus of uranium into two smaller nuclei, must be accompanied by an enormous release of energy. Nuclear fission is the process exploited by nuclear reactors to generate heat and, subsequently, electricity.[34] This process is also one of the basics of nuclear weapons that were developed in the U.S. during World War II and used against Japan in 1945.
Structure of the Milky Way
Heidi Jo Newberg's team found that Milky Way is cannibalizing stars from smaller galaxies[35][36][37] and that the Milky Way is larger and has more ripples than was previously understood.[38]
Chirped pulse amplification
Donna Strickland received the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of chirped pulse amplification, a technique which "paved the way towards the shortest and most intense laser pulses ever created by mankind."[39]
Semiconductor saturable-absorber mirror
semiconductor saturable absorber mirror (SESAM) invented and demonstrated by Ursula Keller in 1992
Conwell–Weisskopf theory
One of the first ionized impurity scattering mobility models proposed by Esther Conwell in 1950

Chemistry edit

Catalysis
The concept of catalysis invented by Scottish chemist Elizabeth Fulhame
Kevlar
A powerful para-aramid synthetic fiber, developed by Stephanie Kwolek at DuPont in 1965
Polonium and radium
The discoveries of elements radium and polonium were made by Polish chemist Marie Curie through the deep study of their nature and their compounds.
Rhenium
Rhenium, a d-block transition metal with Atomic number 75, was first isolated by Ida Noddack and her husband. The existence of this element was predicted by Dmitri Mendeleev. Ida Noddack was nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Seaborgium
Carol Alonso was a co-discoverer of seaborgium, a synthetic chemical element with symbol Sg and atomic number 106.[40]
Scotchgard
This stain repellent and durable water repellent was co-invented by chemists Patsy Sherman and Samuel Smith while working for 3M.
Langmuir–Blodgett film
The technique for making Langmuir–Blodgett film, which involves immersing a substrate into a solution to deposit a monolayer of molecules onto a substrate, was co-invented by Katharine Burr Blodgett and Irving Langmuir while working for General Electric. Earlier work by Agnes Pockels influenced the development of the trough.
Zeolite Y
Zeolite Y, a molecular sieve used to catalyse fractional distillation in petroleum refining, was invented by Edith M. Flanigen while working for Union Carbide. Flanigen also co-invented a synthetic emerald and was the first female recipient of the Perkin Medal in 1992.
Synthetic radiochemistry
Irene Joliot-Curie was awarded the 1935 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for synthesis of new radioactive elements for application in medicine. The prize was shared jointly with her husband Jean Frederic Joliot.
Structure of benzene
The planar structure of benzene, an important cyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, was determined by Kathleen Lonsdale using X-ray crystallography. The nature of the chemical bonds had been a mystery for many years. Alongside Marjory Stephenson, Kathleen Lonsdale was one of the first two women to be elected a Fellow of The Royal Society.
Structure of vitamin B12
The chemical structure was determined by Dorothy Hodgkin using crystallographic data. She was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her work on Vitamin B12 and other complex molecules.
Electron microscopy
The in-situ atomic-resolution environmental transmission electron microscope (ETEM) was created by Pratibha Gai in 2009. This microscope allows for visualisation of chemical reactions at the atomic scale. Dame Gai decided not to patent her device, the culmination of 20 years' work, in order to further the advancement of science.
Photocatalysis
In 2015, Deepika Kurup invented a photocatalytic composite material that removes 100% of faecal coliform bacteria from contaminated water. Deepika has won the Discovery Education 3M Young Scientist Challenge award and The US Stockholm Junior Water Prize for her work.
Surface chemistry (surface science)
Agnes Pockels pioneered the new discipline of surface chemistry from her kitchen after being denied formal science training due to her gender. She created the Pockels Trough to measure surface tension, published several papers and was credited by Lord Rayleigh and Irving Langmuir.
Mass spectrometry
Sybil M. Rock developed the mathematical techniques used in analysing the results from mass spectrometers and devised many of the procedures for mixture analysis.
Carbon dioxide
Eunice Newton Foote was the first scientist to make the connection between the amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere and climate change in 1856. She discovered the warming properties of carbon dioxide and the "greenhouse effect." She was able to submit her experiment and findings at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS); however, because she was a woman and not able to be a member of the organization, Professor Joseph Henry of the Smithsonian Institution presented her findings.
Bioorthogonal chemistry
The term was coined by Carolyn Bertozzi in 2003. Since its introduction, the concept of the bioorthogonal reaction has enabled the study of biomolecules such as glycans, proteins, and lipids

Geology edit

Earth's inner core
Discovered in 1936 by Danish seismologist Inge Lehmann. Through her work on seismology she was able to conclude that the Earth had a solid inner core and a molten outer core to explain inconsistencies in seismic wave data from earth quakes.

Documentation of all volcanos in planet Earth.

In February 2005, Rosaly Lopes – planetary scientist and volcanologist – wrote "Volcano Adventure Guide", in order to document every single volcano on planet Earth through a variety of aspects. This is the only book that addresses all volcanos on Earth; it provides information such as: volcano behavior, types of eruptions, dangers, maps, and even travel tips.

Household edit

Square-bottom paper bag
In 1868, Margaret Knight invented a machine that folded and glued flat-bottomed brown paper bags familiar to shoppers today. She obtained 87 US patents that include lid-removing pliers, a numbering machine, a window frame and sash, and variants on rotary engines.[41]
Dishwasher
Josephine Cochrane developed in 1887 the first commercially successful dishwasher, together with mechanic George Butters.
Improved ironing board
In 1892, Sarah Boone obtained a patent in the United States for improvements to the ironing board, allowing for better quality ironing for shirt sleeves.[42]
Central heating
In 1919, Alice Parker invented a system of gas-powered central heating. While her particular design was never built, it was the first time an inventor had conceived of using natural gas to heat a personal home, which inspired the future central heating systems.
Automatic Rotimaker
In 2008, Pranoti Nagarkar-Israni invented a kitchen robot called Rotimatic, which makes rotis, tortillas, pizza crusts and puris in under a minute. She has obtained 6 patents. The product makes use of artificial intelligence and Internet of Things to understand user requirements and improve itself after each use.
Correction fluid
Bette Nesmith Graham, the founder of the Liquid Paper company, invented one of the first forms of correction fluid in 1956.[43]
House solar heating
Hungarian-American MIT inventor Mária Telkes and American architect Eleanor Raymond created, in 1947, the Dover Sun House, the first house powered by solar energy.
Wrinkle-free fiber
Wrinkle-free fiber invented by Ruth R. Benerito The invention was said to have "saved the cotton industry".

Cosmetics edit

Hot comb
The hot comb was an invention developed in France as a way for women with coarse curly hair to achieve a fine straight look traditionally modeled by historical Egyptian women.[44] However, it was Annie Malone who first patented this tool, while her protégé and former worker, Madam C. J. Walker, widened the teeth.[45]

Vehicle appliances edit

Windscreen wiper
Mary Anderson is credited for inventing the first functional windscreen wiper in 1903. Two other inventors, Robert Douglass and John Apjohn, also patented windscreen cleaning devices in the same year.
Car heater
Margaret A. Wilcox invented an improved car heater, which directed air from over the engine to warm the chilly toes of aristocratic 19th-century motorists, in 1893. She also invented a combined clothes and dish washer.[46][unreliable source?]
Airplane mufflers
Eldorado Jones is credited with inventing a light-weight electric iron, travel size iron board, and airplane mufflers in 1919.
Underwater telescope
Patented by Sarah Mather in 1845, this permitted sea-going vessels to survey the depths of the ocean.[47][48] It used a camphine lamp in a glass globe that was sunk in the water. The device allowed examination of the hull and other details from a person on the deck of a boat.[49] In 1864 Sarah Mather improved her invention to detect Confederate underwater warships.[50]

Computing edit

Written computer program
During a nine-month period in 1842–43, Ada Lovelace translated the memoir of Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea. The memoir covered the Analytical Engine. The translation contained Note G which completely detailed a method for calculating Bernoulli numbers using the Analytical Engine. This note is recognized by some historians as the world's first written computer program.[51]
Written compiler
An early compiler related tool was written by Grace Hopper, in 1952, for the A-0 programming language.[52] She also helped to popularize the idea of machine-independent programming languages which led to the development of COBOL, one of the first high-level programming languages.
Written (programming) languages
Nine coding languages were invented by women: ARC assembly language by Kathleen Booth in 1950, Address by Kateryna Yushchenko in 1955, COBOL by Grace Hopper along with other members of the Conference on Data System Languages in 1959, FORMAC by Jean Sammet in 1962, Logo by Cynthia Solomon in 1967 with members of her team, CLU by Barbara Liskov in 1974, Smalltalk by Adele Goldberg, Diana Merry, and four main other team members at Xerox PARC in 1980, BBC BASIC by Sophie Wilson in 1981, Coq by Christine Paulin-Mohring along with eight development team members of the Lab in 1991. More generally speaking, women have strongly impacted the data processing domain especially women in computing.

Mathematics edit

Daubechies wavelet
Ingrid Daubechies introduced the Daubechies wavelet and contributed to the development of the CDF wavelet, important tools in image compression.
You can't hear the shape of a drum.
In 1966, Mark Kac asked whether the shape of a drum could be determined by the sound it makes (whether a Riemannian manifold is determined by the spectrum of its Laplace–Beltrami operator). John Milnor observed that a theorem due to Witt implied the existence of a pair of 16-dimensional tori that have the same spectrum but different shapes. However, the problem in two dimensions remained open until 1992, when Carolyn S. Gordon with coauthors Webb and Wolpert, constructed a pair of regions in the Euclidean plane that have different shapes but identical eigenvalues (see figure on right).[53]
Cauchy–Kovalevskaya theorem
In mathematics, the Cauchy–Kowalevski theorem (also written as the Cauchy–Kovalevskaya theorem) is the main local existence and uniqueness theorem for analytic partial differential equations associated with Cauchy initial value problems. A special case was proven by Augustin Cauchy (1842), and the full result by Sophia Kovalevskaya (1875).[54][55]
Kovalevskaya top
In classical mechanics, the precession of a rigid body such as a top under the influence of gravity is not, in general, an integrable problem. There are however three (or four) famous cases that are integrable, the Euler, the Lagrange, and the Kovalevskaya top.[56][57] The Kovalevskaya top[58][59] is a special symmetric top with a unique ratio of the moments of inertia which satisfy the relation
 
That is, two moments of inertia are equal, the third is half as large, and the center of gravity is located in the plane perpendicular to the symmetry axis (parallel to the plane of the two equal points).
QR algorithm
In numerical linear algebra, the QR algorithm is an eigenvalue algorithm: that is, a procedure to calculate the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a matrix. The QR algorithm was developed in the late 1950s by John G. F. Francis and by Vera N. Kublanovskaya, working independently.[60][61][62] The basic idea is to perform a QR decomposition, writing the matrix as a product of an orthogonal matrix and an upper triangular matrix, multiply the factors in the reverse order, and iterate.
Navier–Stokes equations
Olga Ladyzhenskaya provided the first rigorous proofs of the convergence of a finite difference method for the Navier–Stokes equations. Ladyzhenskaya was on the shortlist for potential recipients for the 1958 Fields Medal,[63] ultimately awarded to Klaus Roth and René Thom.[64]
Braid groups are linear
Ruth Lawrence's 1990 paper, "Homological representations of the Hecke algebra", in Communications in Mathematical Physics, introduced, among other things, certain novel linear representations of the braid group — known as Lawrence–Krammer representation. In papers published in 2000 and 2001, Daan Krammer and Stephen Bigelow established the faithfulness of Lawrence's representation. This result goes by the phrase "braid groups are linear."[65]
Recursion theory
Rózsa Péter was one of the founders of recursion theory, a branch of mathematical logic, of computer science, and of the theory of computation that originated in the 1930s with the study of computable functions and Turing degrees. The field has since expanded to include the study of generalized computability and definability. In these areas, recursion theory overlaps with proof theory and effective descriptive set theory.[66][67]
Hilbert's tenth problem
Hilbert's tenth problem is the tenth on the list of mathematical problems that the German mathematician David Hilbert posed in 1900. It is the challenge to provide a general algorithm which, for any given Diophantine equation (a polynomial equation with integer coefficients and a finite number of unknowns) can decide whether the equation has a solution with all unknowns taking integer values.
For example, the Diophantine equation   has an integer solution:  . By contrast, the Diophantine equation   has no such solution.
Hilbert's tenth problem has been solved, and it has a negative answer: such a general algorithm does not exist. This is the result of combined work of Martin Davis, Yuri Matiyasevich, Hilary Putnam and Julia Robinson which spans 21 years, with Yuri Matiyasevich completing the theorem in 1970.[68] The theorem is now known as Matiyasevich's theorem or the MRDP theorem.
Optimal design
In the design of experiments, optimal designs (or optimum designs[69]) are a class of experimental designs that are optimal with respect to some statistical criterion. The creation of this field of statistics has been credited to Danish statistician Kirstine Smith.[70][71]
Three-gap theorem
The three-gap theorem states that if one places n points on a circle, at angles of θ, 2θ, 3θ ... from the starting point, then there will be at most three distinct distances between pairs of points in adjacent positions around the circle. When there are three distances, the larger of the three always equals the sum of the other two.[72] Unless θ is a rational multiple of π, there will also be at least two distinct distances.
This result was conjectured by Hugo Steinhaus, and proved in the 1950s by Vera T. Sós, János Surányi [hu], and Stanisław Świerczkowski. Its applications include the study of plant growth and musical tuning systems, and the theory of Sturmian words.[73]
Noether normalization lemma
The Noether normalization lemma is a result of commutative algebra, introduced by Emmy Noether in 1926.[74] It states that for any field k, and any finitely generated commutative k-algebra A, there exists a nonnegative integer d and algebraically independent elements y1, y2, ..., yd in A such that A is a finitely generated module over the polynomial ring S:=k[y1, y2, ..., yd].
The theorem has a geometric interpretation. Suppose A is integral. Let S be the coordinate ring of the d-dimensional affine space  , and A as the coordinate ring of some other d-dimensional affine variety X. Then the inclusion map S → A induces a surjective finite morphism of affine varieties  . The conclusion is that any affine variety is a branched covering of affine space.
The Noether normalization lemma is an important step in proving Hilbert's Nullstellensatz.
Noether's theorem
Noether's (first)[75] theorem states that every differentiable symmetry of the action of a physical system has a corresponding conservation law. The theorem was proven by mathematician Emmy Noether in 1915 and published in 1918,[76] although a special case was proven by E. Cosserat & F. Cosserat in 1909.[77] The action of a physical system is the integral over time of a Lagrangian function (which may or may not be an integral over space of a Lagrangian density function), from which the system's behavior can be determined by the principle of least action.
Noether's theorem is used in theoretical physics and the calculus of variations. A generalization of the formulations on constants of motion in Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics (developed in 1788 and 1833, respectively), it does not apply to systems that cannot be modeled with a Lagrangian alone (e.g. systems with a Rayleigh dissipation function). In particular, dissipative systems with continuous symmetries need not have a corresponding conservation law.
Noether's theorem can be stated informally

If a system has a continuous symmetry property, then there are corresponding quantities whose values are conserved in time.[78]

Noether's second theorem
In mathematics and theoretical physics, Noether's second theorem relates symmetries of an action functional with a system of differential equations.[79] The action S of a physical system is an integral of a so-called Lagrangian function L, from which the system's behavior can be determined by the principle of least action.
Isomorphism theorems
In mathematics, specifically abstract algebra, the isomorphism theorems are three theorems that describe the relationship between quotients, homomorphisms, and subobjects. Versions of the theorems exist for groups, rings, vector spaces, modules, Lie algebras, and various other algebraic structures. In universal algebra, the isomorphism theorems can be generalized to the context of algebras and congruences.
The isomorphism theorems were formulated in some generality for homomorphisms of modules by Emmy Noether in her paper Abstrakter Aufbau der Idealtheorie in algebraischen Zahl- und Funktionenkörpern which was published in 1927 in Mathematische Annalen. Less general versions of these theorems can be found in work of Richard Dedekind and previous papers by Noether.
Three years later, B.L. van der Waerden published his influential Algebra, the first abstract algebra textbook that took the groups-rings-fields approach to the subject. Van der Waerden credited lectures by Noether on group theory and Emil Artin on algebra, as well as a seminar conducted by Artin, Wilhelm Blaschke, Otto Schreier, and van der Waerden himself on ideals as the main references. The three isomorphism theorems, called homomorphism theorem, and two laws of isomorphism when applied to groups, appear explicitly.
Lasker–Noether theorem
In mathematics, the Lasker–Noether theorem states that every Noetherian ring is a Lasker ring, which means that every ideal can be decomposed as an intersection, called primary decomposition, of finitely many primary ideals (which are related to, but not quite the same as, powers of prime ideals). The theorem was first proven by Emanuel Lasker (1905) for the special case of polynomial rings and convergent power series rings, and was proven in its full generality by Emmy Noether (1921).
The Lasker–Noether theorem is an extension of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic, and more generally the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups to all Noetherian rings. The Lasker–Noether theorem plays an important role in algebraic geometry, by asserting that every algebraic set may be uniquely decomposed into a finite union of irreducible components.
Albert–Brauer–Hasse–Noether theorem
In algebraic number theory, the Albert–Brauer–Hasse–Noether theorem states that a central simple algebra over an algebraic number field K which splits over every completion Kv is a matrix algebra over K. The theorem is an example of a local-global principle in algebraic number theory and leads to a complete description of finite-dimensional division algebras over algebraic number fields in terms of their local invariants. It was proved independently by Richard Brauer, Helmut Hasse, and Emmy Noether and by Abraham Adrian Albert.
The earthquake flow on Teichmüller space is ergodic
Fields medalist Maryam Mirzakhani proved the long-standing conjecture that William Thurston's earthquake flow on Teichmüller space is ergodic.

Wireless transmission edit

Torpedoes Radio guidance device
Austrian-American Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr, together with musicist and author George Antheil, developed a mechanism for radio guidance system for Allied torpedoes which used spread spectrum and frequency hopping technology to defeat the threat of jamming by the Axis powers.[80] Though the US Navy did not adopt frequency-hopping until the 1960s, the principles of it are now incorporated into modern Wi-Fi, CDMA and Bluetooth technology.[81]

Food and food appliances edit

Chocolate-chip cookies
Invented by Ruth Graves Wakefield in 1938.
Pizza saver
Patented in 1985 by Carmela Vitale of Dix Hills, New York.
Mint chocolate chip
Invented by Marilyn Ricketts in 1973.

Biology edit

DNA structure
Rosalind Franklin was a British molecular biologist who was instrumental in the discovery of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in 1951. At King's College London where she applied X-ray diffraction to the study of biological materials, she performed several X-ray radiographs of the DNA.
Sex chromosomes
Nettie Maria Stevens is credited with the discovery of sex chromosomes.[82]
The Cori cycle (lactic acid cycle)
Gerty Cori, together with Carl Ferdinand Cori, discovered the Cori cycle, the metabolic pathway in which lactate produced by anaerobic glycolysis in the muscles moves to the liver and is converted to glucose, which then returns to the muscles and is metabolized back to lactate.[83]
Radioimmunoassay
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow developed the radioimmunoassay, an immunoassay that uses radiolabeled molecules in a stepwise formation of immune complexes at the Veterans Administration Hospital in the Bronx, New York. This technique is used to accurately measure levels of substances such as hormones which are found in small concentrations in the body.[84]
Transposable elements
Barbara McClintock discovered transposable elements (also known as transposons and jumping genes), DNA sequences which change their position within the genome. Transposons make up a large fraction of the DNA in eukaryotic cells (44% if the human genome[85] and 90% of the maize genome[86][87]) and play an important role in genome function and evolution.[88] In Oxytricha, which has a unique genetic system, these elements play a critical role in development.[89]
Nerve growth factor
Rita Levi-Montalcini and colleague Stanley Cohen discovered nerve growth factor, a neurotrophic factor and neuropeptide primarily involved in the regulation of growth, maintenance, proliferation, and survival of certain target neurons. This discovery was recognized with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1986.[90]
Gap genes
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard and colleague Eric Wieschaus were the first to describe gap genes, genes involved in the development of segmentation in Drosophila embryogenesis. This work was foundational to our understanding of the genetic control of embryonic development.[91]
Telomerase
Elizabeth Blackburn, Carol W. Greider, and Jack W. Szostak co-discovered the enzyme telomerase, which replenishes the telomere, a structure found at the ends of chromosomes which protects the DNA in the rest of the chromosome from damage.[92]
 
grid cell firing rate across space
Grid cells
May-Britt Moser, together with Edvard Moser and their students Torkel Hafting, Marianne Fyhn and Sturla Molden, discovered grid cells, cells which contribute to the brain's positioning and navigation system. The grid cells of a freely moving animal fire when the animal is near the vertices of a hexagonal grid in the environment.[93]
CRISPR gene editing
CRISPR/cas9 invented by Jennifer Anne Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier

Psychology edit

Myers–Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
Katharine Cook Briggs and her daughter Isabel Briggs Myers invented this psychological test, where participants answer an introspective self-report questionnaire. The result takes the form of 16 types, indicating the psychological preferences of the participant.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Françoise Barré-Sinoussi - Facts". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 2018-08-08.
  2. ^ de Clercq, Erik; Field, Hugh J (5 October 2005). "Antiviral prodrugs – the development of successful prodrug strategies for antiviral chemotherapy". British Journal of Pharmacology. Vol. 147, no. 1. Wiley-Blackwell (published January 2006). pp. 1–11. doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0706446. PMC 1615839. PMID 16284630.
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list, inventions, discoveries, women, this, list, incomplete, help, adding, missing, items, february, 2015, this, page, aims, list, inventions, discoveries, which, women, played, major, role, contents, medicine, diseases, pharmaceuticals, pediatrics, astronomy. This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2015 This page aims to list inventions and discoveries in which women played a major role Contents 1 Medicine 1 1 Diseases 1 2 Pharmaceuticals 1 3 Pediatrics 2 Astronomy and astrophysics 3 Physics 4 Chemistry 5 Geology 6 Household 7 Cosmetics 8 Vehicle appliances 9 Computing 10 Mathematics 11 Wireless transmission 12 Food and food appliances 13 Biology 14 Psychology 15 See also 16 ReferencesMedicine editDiseases edit Chemotherapy Jane Cooke Wright 1919 2013 was an oncologist who pioneered the use of chemotherapy with the drug methotrexate to treat breast cancer and skin cancer mycosis fungoids HIV Francoise Barre Sinoussi and Luc Montaigner discovered HIV the cause of AIDS 1 Pharmaceuticals edit Aciclovir Gertrude B Elion contributed to the development of aciclovir an antiviral drug used for the treatment of herpes simplex virus infections chickenpox and shingles 2 Artemisinin and dihydroartemisinin Tu Youyou discovered artemisinin and dihydroartemisinin both now standard treatments for malaria Artemisinin is isolated from the plant Artemisia annua sweet wormwood a herb employed in Chinese traditional medicine 3 Azathioprine Azathioprine is an Immunosuppressive drug used in rheumatoid arthritis granulomatosis with polyangiitis Crohn s disease ulcerative colitis and in kidney transplants to prevent rejection first synthesized by George H Hitchings and Gertrude B Elion in 1957 4 5 6 Mercaptopurine Mercaptopurine is a medication for cancer and autoimmune diseases including acute lymphocytic leukemia ALL chronic myeloid leukemia CML Crohn s disease and ulcerative colitis It was discovered by Gertrude B Elion and George H Hitchings 7 Pyrimethamine Pyrimethamine sold under the trade name Daraprim is an anti parasitic medication used to treat a variety of conditions including toxoplasmosis and isosporiasis Pyrimethamine was initially developed by Nobel Prize winning scientist Gertrude Elion as a treatment for malaria 8 9 AZT Gertrude Elion made foundational contributions to the development of AZT one of the first antiretroviral medications used in the prevention and treatment of HIV AIDS 10 Vitamin E Katharine Bishop and Herbert McLean Evans co discovered Vitamin E while studying the reproductive cycle of rats Pediatrics edit nbsp Virginia Apgar 11 Apgar score Invented in 1952 by Virginia Apgar Disposable diapers The first disposable diaper was invented in 1946 by Marion Donovan a professional turned housewife who wanted to ensure her children s cloth diapers remained dry while they slept 12 Donovan patented her design called Boaters in 1951 She also invented the first paper diapers but executives did not invest in this idea and it was consequently scrapped for over ten years until Procter amp Gamble used Donovan s design ideas to create Pampers Another diaper design was created by Valerie Hunter Gordon nee de Ferranti who patented it in 1948 13 14 Child carriers Snugli and Weego were invented by nurse and peacekeeper Ann Moore first in the 1960s Pertussis A pioneering female American doctor medical researcher and an outspoken voice in the pediatric community the supercentenarian Leila Alice Denmark 1898 2012 is credited as co developer of the pertussis whooping cough vaccine citation needed Astronomy and astrophysics editHarvard Stellar Classification Scheme The first classification of stars based on their temperature created by Annie Jump Cannon used in publications up to 1924 Pulsars Rapidly rotating neutron stars discovered by Jocelyn Bell Burnell in 1967 The galaxy rotation problem A major piece of evidence for the presence of dark matter in the Universe discovered by Vera Rubin from observations of galactic rotation curves in the 1970s Stars luminosity Henrietta Swan Leavitt was an American astronomer who discovered the relation between the luminosity and the period of Cepheid variable stars at the beginning of 20th century Merieme Chadid is a French and Moroccan astronomer and explorer who discovered hypersonic shock waves in variable stars as well as the first astronomer committed to install a large observatory at the heart of Antarctica towards an understanding of stellar evolution in the Universe by leading scientific polar explorations Radio astronomy Ruby Violet Payne Scott was an Australian pioneer in radiophysics and radio astronomy as well as the first female radio astronomer 15 discovering Type I and Type III solar radio bursts Stars are primarily composed of hydrogen and helium Cecilia Payne Gaposchkin found in her 1925 PhD thesis that stars are primarily composed of hydrogen and helium Thus her thesis established that hydrogen is the most abundant element in the Universe 16 When Payne s dissertation was reviewed astronomer Henry Norris Russell dissuaded her from concluding that the composition of the Sun was predominantly hydrogen and thus very different from that of the Earth as it contradicted the accepted wisdom at the time She consequently described the result in her thesis as spurious 16 Russell realized she was correct four years later after having derived the same result by different means and publishing it in 1929 He acknowledged Payne s work and discovery admiringly in his paper but he is often credited for the conclusions they both reached 17 18 19 The new outer arm of the Milky Way In 2004 astrophysicist and radio astronomer Naomi McClure Griffiths identified a new spiral arm of the Milky Way galaxy 20 nbsp PIA19341 MilkyWayGalaxy SpiralArmsData WISE 20150603Physics editRadiation Marie Curie born Maria Salomea Sklodowska was the first woman to receive a Nobel prize for her works on radiations and up until today when the only woman to receive two Nobel prizes among them one Nobel prize in chemistry for discoveries on polonium and radium She is the sole laureate to be recognized within two distinct scientific areas Fanny Gates further investigated the properties of radiation Together with Ernest Rutherford she amassed evidence that radioactivity was not the result of any simple chemical or physical processes 21 In particular Gates showed that radioactivity could not be destroyed by heat or ionization due to chemical reactions and that radioactive materials differ from phosphorescent materials both qualitatively and quantitatively 22 Radon In 1901 Harriet Brooks and Ernest Rutherford contributed to the discovery of the element radon by finding evidence that the emanation emitted by thorium compounds was likely to be a gas 23 This follows work in 1899 by Pierre and Marie Curie who observed that the gas emitted by radium remained radioactive for a month 24 Kinetic energy Emilie du Chatelet born Gabrielle Emilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil translated Isaac Newton s Principia Mathematica from Latin to French during the 18th century She carried out physics experiments popularizing the work of Leibniz She demonstrated that the kinetic energy of an object was proportional to its mass and the square of its velocity and postulated a conservation law for the total energy of a system Heavy elements in cosmic radiation As a graduate student Phyllis S Freier found evidence for the existence of elements heavier than helium in cosmic radiation Her work was published in Physical Review in 1948 with co authors Edward J Lofgren Edward P Ney and Frank Oppenheimer 25 Beta particles are electrons Gertrude Scharff Goldhaber and her husband Maurice Goldhaber showed that beta particles were identical to electrons 26 Top quark Melissa Franklin s team at Fermilab found some of the first evidence for the existence of the top quark 27 Nuclear shell Maria Goeppert Mayer a German immigrant to the US who studied at Johns Hopkins during the Great Depression persisted in her studies even when no university would employ her and became a chemical physicist Her most famous contribution to modern physics was discovering the nuclear shell of the atomic nucleus for which she won the Nobel Prize in 1963 Slow light Lene Hau led a Harvard University team who used a Bose Einstein condensate to slow down a beam of light to about 17 metres per second and in 2001 was able to stop a beam completely 28 Astatine The Austrian physicist Berta Karlik discovered that the element 85 astatine is a product of the natural decay processes 29 Bohr van Leeuwen theorem In her 1919 thesis 30 31 Hendrika Johanna van Leeuwen explained why magnetism is an essentially quantum mechanical effect a result now referred to as the Bohr van Leeuwen theorem Niels Bohr had arrived at the same conclusion a few years earlier Francium In 1939 Marguerite Perey a student of Marie Curie discovered the element francium by purifying samples of lanthanum that contained actinium Perey first noticed that the actinium she purified was emitting unexpected radiation After further study she was able to isolate this new element which she named francium for France 32 Nuclear fission Austrian Swedish physicist Lise Meitner together with Otto Hahn and Otto Robert Frisch led the small group of scientists who first discovered nuclear fission of uranium when it absorbed an extra neutron The results were published in early 1939 8 33 Meitner Hahn and Frisch understood that the fission process which splits the atomic nucleus of uranium into two smaller nuclei must be accompanied by an enormous release of energy Nuclear fission is the process exploited by nuclear reactors to generate heat and subsequently electricity 34 This process is also one of the basics of nuclear weapons that were developed in the U S during World War II and used against Japan in 1945 Structure of the Milky Way Heidi Jo Newberg s team found that Milky Way is cannibalizing stars from smaller galaxies 35 36 37 and that the Milky Way is larger and has more ripples than was previously understood 38 Chirped pulse amplification Donna Strickland received the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of chirped pulse amplification a technique which paved the way towards the shortest and most intense laser pulses ever created by mankind 39 Semiconductor saturable absorber mirror semiconductor saturable absorber mirror SESAM invented and demonstrated by Ursula Keller in 1992Conwell Weisskopf theory One of the first ionized impurity scattering mobility models proposed by Esther Conwell in 1950Chemistry editCatalysis The concept of catalysis invented by Scottish chemist Elizabeth FulhameKevlar A powerful para aramid synthetic fiber developed by Stephanie Kwolek at DuPont in 1965Polonium and radium The discoveries of elements radium and polonium were made by Polish chemist Marie Curie through the deep study of their nature and their compounds Rhenium Rhenium a d block transition metal with Atomic number 75 was first isolated by Ida Noddack and her husband The existence of this element was predicted by Dmitri Mendeleev Ida Noddack was nominated three times for the Nobel Prize in Chemistry Seaborgium Carol Alonso was a co discoverer of seaborgium a synthetic chemical element with symbol Sg and atomic number 106 40 Scotchgard This stain repellent and durable water repellent was co invented by chemists Patsy Sherman and Samuel Smith while working for 3M Langmuir Blodgett film The technique for making Langmuir Blodgett film which involves immersing a substrate into a solution to deposit a monolayer of molecules onto a substrate was co invented by Katharine Burr Blodgett and Irving Langmuir while working for General Electric Earlier work by Agnes Pockels influenced the development of the trough Zeolite Y Zeolite Y a molecular sieve used to catalyse fractional distillation in petroleum refining was invented by Edith M Flanigen while working for Union Carbide Flanigen also co invented a synthetic emerald and was the first female recipient of the Perkin Medal in 1992 Synthetic radiochemistry Irene Joliot Curie was awarded the 1935 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for synthesis of new radioactive elements for application in medicine The prize was shared jointly with her husband Jean Frederic Joliot Structure of benzene The planar structure of benzene an important cyclic aromatic hydrocarbon was determined by Kathleen Lonsdale using X ray crystallography The nature of the chemical bonds had been a mystery for many years Alongside Marjory Stephenson Kathleen Lonsdale was one of the first two women to be elected a Fellow of The Royal Society Structure of vitamin B12 The chemical structure was determined by Dorothy Hodgkin using crystallographic data She was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her work on Vitamin B12 and other complex molecules Electron microscopy The in situ atomic resolution environmental transmission electron microscope ETEM was created by Pratibha Gai in 2009 This microscope allows for visualisation of chemical reactions at the atomic scale Dame Gai decided not to patent her device the culmination of 20 years work in order to further the advancement of science Photocatalysis In 2015 Deepika Kurup invented a photocatalytic composite material that removes 100 of faecal coliform bacteria from contaminated water Deepika has won the Discovery Education 3M Young Scientist Challenge award and The US Stockholm Junior Water Prize for her work Surface chemistry surface science Agnes Pockels pioneered the new discipline of surface chemistry from her kitchen after being denied formal science training due to her gender She created the Pockels Trough to measure surface tension published several papers and was credited by Lord Rayleigh and Irving Langmuir Mass spectrometry Sybil M Rock developed the mathematical techniques used in analysing the results from mass spectrometers and devised many of the procedures for mixture analysis Carbon dioxide Eunice Newton Foote was the first scientist to make the connection between the amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere and climate change in 1856 She discovered the warming properties of carbon dioxide and the greenhouse effect She was able to submit her experiment and findings at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS however because she was a woman and not able to be a member of the organization Professor Joseph Henry of the Smithsonian Institution presented her findings Bioorthogonal chemistry The term was coined by Carolyn Bertozzi in 2003 Since its introduction the concept of the bioorthogonal reaction has enabled the study of biomolecules such as glycans proteins and lipidsGeology editEarth s inner core Discovered in 1936 by Danish seismologist Inge Lehmann Through her work on seismology she was able to conclude that the Earth had a solid inner core and a molten outer core to explain inconsistencies in seismic wave data from earth quakes Documentation of all volcanos in planet Earth In February 2005 Rosaly Lopes planetary scientist and volcanologist wrote Volcano Adventure Guide in order to document every single volcano on planet Earth through a variety of aspects This is the only book that addresses all volcanos on Earth it provides information such as volcano behavior types of eruptions dangers maps and even travel tips Household editSquare bottom paper bag In 1868 Margaret Knight invented a machine that folded and glued flat bottomed brown paper bags familiar to shoppers today She obtained 87 US patents that include lid removing pliers a numbering machine a window frame and sash and variants on rotary engines 41 Dishwasher Josephine Cochrane developed in 1887 the first commercially successful dishwasher together with mechanic George Butters Improved ironing board In 1892 Sarah Boone obtained a patent in the United States for improvements to the ironing board allowing for better quality ironing for shirt sleeves 42 Central heating In 1919 Alice Parker invented a system of gas powered central heating While her particular design was never built it was the first time an inventor had conceived of using natural gas to heat a personal home which inspired the future central heating systems Automatic Rotimaker In 2008 Pranoti Nagarkar Israni invented a kitchen robot called Rotimatic which makes rotis tortillas pizza crusts and puris in under a minute She has obtained 6 patents The product makes use of artificial intelligence and Internet of Things to understand user requirements and improve itself after each use Correction fluid Bette Nesmith Graham the founder of the Liquid Paper company invented one of the first forms of correction fluid in 1956 43 House solar heating Hungarian American MIT inventor Maria Telkes and American architect Eleanor Raymond created in 1947 the Dover Sun House the first house powered by solar energy Wrinkle free fiber Wrinkle free fiber invented by Ruth R Benerito The invention was said to have saved the cotton industry Cosmetics editHot comb The hot comb was an invention developed in France as a way for women with coarse curly hair to achieve a fine straight look traditionally modeled by historical Egyptian women 44 However it was Annie Malone who first patented this tool while her protege and former worker Madam C J Walker widened the teeth 45 Vehicle appliances editWindscreen wiper Mary Anderson is credited for inventing the first functional windscreen wiper in 1903 Two other inventors Robert Douglass and John Apjohn also patented windscreen cleaning devices in the same year Car heater Margaret A Wilcox invented an improved car heater which directed air from over the engine to warm the chilly toes of aristocratic 19th century motorists in 1893 She also invented a combined clothes and dish washer 46 unreliable source Airplane mufflers Eldorado Jones is credited with inventing a light weight electric iron travel size iron board and airplane mufflers in 1919 Underwater telescope Patented by Sarah Mather in 1845 this permitted sea going vessels to survey the depths of the ocean 47 48 It used a camphine lamp in a glass globe that was sunk in the water The device allowed examination of the hull and other details from a person on the deck of a boat 49 In 1864 Sarah Mather improved her invention to detect Confederate underwater warships 50 Computing editWritten computer program During a nine month period in 1842 43 Ada Lovelace translated the memoir of Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea The memoir covered the Analytical Engine The translation contained Note G which completely detailed a method for calculating Bernoulli numbers using the Analytical Engine This note is recognized by some historians as the world s first written computer program 51 Written compiler An early compiler related tool was written by Grace Hopper in 1952 for the A 0 programming language 52 She also helped to popularize the idea of machine independent programming languages which led to the development of COBOL one of the first high level programming languages Written programming languages Nine coding languages were invented by women ARC assembly language by Kathleen Booth in 1950 Address by Kateryna Yushchenko in 1955 COBOL by Grace Hopper along with other members of the Conference on Data System Languages in 1959 FORMAC by Jean Sammet in 1962 Logo by Cynthia Solomon in 1967 with members of her team CLU by Barbara Liskov in 1974 Smalltalk by Adele Goldberg Diana Merry and four main other team members at Xerox PARC in 1980 BBC BASIC by Sophie Wilson in 1981 Coq by Christine Paulin Mohring along with eight development team members of the Lab in 1991 More generally speaking women have strongly impacted the data processing domain especially women in computing Mathematics editDaubechies wavelet Ingrid Daubechies introduced the Daubechies wavelet and contributed to the development of the CDF wavelet important tools in image compression You can t hear the shape of a drum In 1966 Mark Kac asked whether the shape of a drum could be determined by the sound it makes whether a Riemannian manifold is determined by the spectrum of its Laplace Beltrami operator John Milnor observed that a theorem due to Witt implied the existence of a pair of 16 dimensional tori that have the same spectrum but different shapes However the problem in two dimensions remained open until 1992 when Carolyn S Gordon with coauthors Webb and Wolpert constructed a pair of regions in the Euclidean plane that have different shapes but identical eigenvalues see figure on right 53 Cauchy Kovalevskaya theorem In mathematics the Cauchy Kowalevski theorem also written as the Cauchy Kovalevskaya theorem is the main local existence and uniqueness theorem for analytic partial differential equations associated with Cauchy initial value problems A special case was proven by Augustin Cauchy 1842 and the full result by Sophia Kovalevskaya 1875 54 55 Kovalevskaya top In classical mechanics the precession of a rigid body such as a top under the influence of gravity is not in general an integrable problem There are however three or four famous cases that are integrable the Euler the Lagrange and the Kovalevskaya top 56 57 The Kovalevskaya top 58 59 is a special symmetric top with a unique ratio of the moments of inertia which satisfy the relationI1 I2 2I3 displaystyle I 1 I 2 2I 3 nbsp That is two moments of inertia are equal the third is half as large and the center of gravity is located in the plane perpendicular to the symmetry axis parallel to the plane of the two equal points QR algorithm In numerical linear algebra the QR algorithm is an eigenvalue algorithm that is a procedure to calculate the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a matrix The QR algorithm was developed in the late 1950s by John G F Francis and by Vera N Kublanovskaya working independently 60 61 62 The basic idea is to perform a QR decomposition writing the matrix as a product of an orthogonal matrix and an upper triangular matrix multiply the factors in the reverse order and iterate Navier Stokes equations Olga Ladyzhenskaya provided the first rigorous proofs of the convergence of a finite difference method for the Navier Stokes equations Ladyzhenskaya was on the shortlist for potential recipients for the 1958 Fields Medal 63 ultimately awarded to Klaus Roth and Rene Thom 64 Braid groups are linear Ruth Lawrence s 1990 paper Homological representations of the Hecke algebra in Communications in Mathematical Physics introduced among other things certain novel linear representations of the braid group known as Lawrence Krammer representation In papers published in 2000 and 2001 Daan Krammer and Stephen Bigelow established the faithfulness of Lawrence s representation This result goes by the phrase braid groups are linear 65 Recursion theory Rozsa Peter was one of the founders of recursion theory a branch of mathematical logic of computer science and of the theory of computation that originated in the 1930s with the study of computable functions and Turing degrees The field has since expanded to include the study of generalized computability and definability In these areas recursion theory overlaps with proof theory and effective descriptive set theory 66 67 Hilbert s tenth problem Hilbert s tenth problem is the tenth on the list of mathematical problems that the German mathematician David Hilbert posed in 1900 It is the challenge to provide a general algorithm which for any given Diophantine equation a polynomial equation with integer coefficients and a finite number of unknowns can decide whether the equation has a solution with all unknowns taking integer values For example the Diophantine equation 3x2 2xy y2z 7 0 displaystyle 3x 2 2xy y 2 z 7 0 nbsp has an integer solution x 1 y 2 z 2 displaystyle x 1 y 2 z 2 nbsp By contrast the Diophantine equation x2 y2 1 0 displaystyle x 2 y 2 1 0 nbsp has no such solution Hilbert s tenth problem has been solved and it has a negative answer such a general algorithm does not exist This is the result of combined work of Martin Davis Yuri Matiyasevich Hilary Putnam and Julia Robinson which spans 21 years with Yuri Matiyasevich completing the theorem in 1970 68 The theorem is now known as Matiyasevich s theorem or the MRDP theorem Optimal design In the design of experiments optimal designs or optimum designs 69 are a class of experimental designs that are optimal with respect to some statistical criterion The creation of this field of statistics has been credited to Danish statistician Kirstine Smith 70 71 Three gap theorem The three gap theorem states that if one places n points on a circle at angles of 8 28 38 from the starting point then there will be at most three distinct distances between pairs of points in adjacent positions around the circle When there are three distances the larger of the three always equals the sum of the other two 72 Unless 8 is a rational multiple of p there will also be at least two distinct distances This result was conjectured by Hugo Steinhaus and proved in the 1950s by Vera T Sos Janos Suranyi hu and Stanislaw Swierczkowski Its applications include the study of plant growth and musical tuning systems and the theory of Sturmian words 73 Noether normalization lemma The Noether normalization lemma is a result of commutative algebra introduced by Emmy Noether in 1926 74 It states that for any field k and any finitely generated commutative k algebra A there exists a nonnegative integer d and algebraically independent elements y1 y2 yd in A such that A is a finitely generated module over the polynomial ring S k y1 y2 yd The theorem has a geometric interpretation Suppose A is integral Let S be the coordinate ring of the d dimensional affine space Akd displaystyle mathbb A k d nbsp and A as the coordinate ring of some other d dimensional affine variety X Then the inclusion map S A induces a surjective finite morphism of affine varieties X Akd displaystyle X to mathbb A k d nbsp The conclusion is that any affine variety is a branched covering of affine space The Noether normalization lemma is an important step in proving Hilbert s Nullstellensatz Noether s theorem Noether s first 75 theorem states that every differentiable symmetry of the action of a physical system has a corresponding conservation law The theorem was proven by mathematician Emmy Noether in 1915 and published in 1918 76 although a special case was proven by E Cosserat amp F Cosserat in 1909 77 The action of a physical system is the integral over time of a Lagrangian function which may or may not be an integral over space of a Lagrangian density function from which the system s behavior can be determined by the principle of least action Noether s theorem is used in theoretical physics and the calculus of variations A generalization of the formulations on constants of motion in Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics developed in 1788 and 1833 respectively it does not apply to systems that cannot be modeled with a Lagrangian alone e g systems with a Rayleigh dissipation function In particular dissipative systems with continuous symmetries need not have a corresponding conservation law Noether s theorem can be stated informallyIf a system has a continuous symmetry property then there are corresponding quantities whose values are conserved in time 78 Noether s second theorem In mathematics and theoretical physics Noether s second theorem relates symmetries of an action functional with a system of differential equations 79 The action S of a physical system is an integral of a so called Lagrangian function L from which the system s behavior can be determined by the principle of least action Isomorphism theorems In mathematics specifically abstract algebra the isomorphism theorems are three theorems that describe the relationship between quotients homomorphisms and subobjects Versions of the theorems exist for groups rings vector spaces modules Lie algebras and various other algebraic structures In universal algebra the isomorphism theorems can be generalized to the context of algebras and congruences The isomorphism theorems were formulated in some generality for homomorphisms of modules by Emmy Noether in her paper Abstrakter Aufbau der Idealtheorie in algebraischen Zahl und Funktionenkorpern which was published in 1927 in Mathematische Annalen Less general versions of these theorems can be found in work of Richard Dedekind and previous papers by Noether Three years later B L van der Waerden published his influential Algebra the first abstract algebra textbook that took the groups rings fields approach to the subject Van der Waerden credited lectures by Noether on group theory and Emil Artin on algebra as well as a seminar conducted by Artin Wilhelm Blaschke Otto Schreier and van der Waerden himself on ideals as the main references The three isomorphism theorems called homomorphism theorem and two laws of isomorphism when applied to groups appear explicitly Lasker Noether theorem In mathematics the Lasker Noether theorem states that every Noetherian ring is a Lasker ring which means that every ideal can be decomposed as an intersection called primary decomposition of finitely many primary ideals which are related to but not quite the same as powers of prime ideals The theorem was first proven by Emanuel Lasker 1905 for the special case of polynomial rings and convergent power series rings and was proven in its full generality by Emmy Noether 1921 The Lasker Noether theorem is an extension of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic and more generally the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups to all Noetherian rings The Lasker Noether theorem plays an important role in algebraic geometry by asserting that every algebraic set may be uniquely decomposed into a finite union of irreducible components Albert Brauer Hasse Noether theorem In algebraic number theory the Albert Brauer Hasse Noether theorem states that a central simple algebra over an algebraic number field K which splits over every completion Kv is a matrix algebra over K The theorem is an example of a local global principle in algebraic number theory and leads to a complete description of finite dimensional division algebras over algebraic number fields in terms of their local invariants It was proved independently by Richard Brauer Helmut Hasse and Emmy Noether and by Abraham Adrian Albert The earthquake flow on Teichmuller space is ergodic Fields medalist Maryam Mirzakhani proved the long standing conjecture that William Thurston s earthquake flow on Teichmuller space is ergodic Wireless transmission editTorpedoes Radio guidance device Austrian American Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr together with musicist and author George Antheil developed a mechanism for radio guidance system for Allied torpedoes which used spread spectrum and frequency hopping technology to defeat the threat of jamming by the Axis powers 80 Though the US Navy did not adopt frequency hopping until the 1960s the principles of it are now incorporated into modern Wi Fi CDMA and Bluetooth technology 81 Food and food appliances editChocolate chip cookies Invented by Ruth Graves Wakefield in 1938 Pizza saver Patented in 1985 by Carmela Vitale of Dix Hills New York Mint chocolate chip Invented by Marilyn Ricketts in 1973 Biology editDNA structure Rosalind Franklin was a British molecular biologist who was instrumental in the discovery of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid DNA in 1951 At King s College London where she applied X ray diffraction to the study of biological materials she performed several X ray radiographs of the DNA Sex chromosomes Nettie Maria Stevens is credited with the discovery of sex chromosomes 82 The Cori cycle lactic acid cycle Gerty Cori together with Carl Ferdinand Cori discovered the Cori cycle the metabolic pathway in which lactate produced by anaerobic glycolysis in the muscles moves to the liver and is converted to glucose which then returns to the muscles and is metabolized back to lactate 83 Radioimmunoassay Rosalyn Sussman Yalow developed the radioimmunoassay an immunoassay that uses radiolabeled molecules in a stepwise formation of immune complexes at the Veterans Administration Hospital in the Bronx New York This technique is used to accurately measure levels of substances such as hormones which are found in small concentrations in the body 84 Transposable elements Barbara McClintock discovered transposable elements also known as transposons and jumping genes DNA sequences which change their position within the genome Transposons make up a large fraction of the DNA in eukaryotic cells 44 if the human genome 85 and 90 of the maize genome 86 87 and play an important role in genome function and evolution 88 In Oxytricha which has a unique genetic system these elements play a critical role in development 89 Nerve growth factor Rita Levi Montalcini and colleague Stanley Cohen discovered nerve growth factor a neurotrophic factor and neuropeptide primarily involved in the regulation of growth maintenance proliferation and survival of certain target neurons This discovery was recognized with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1986 90 Gap genes Christiane Nusslein Volhard and colleague Eric Wieschaus were the first to describe gap genes genes involved in the development of segmentation in Drosophila embryogenesis This work was foundational to our understanding of the genetic control of embryonic development 91 Telomerase Elizabeth Blackburn Carol W Greider and Jack W Szostak co discovered the enzyme telomerase which replenishes the telomere a structure found at the ends of chromosomes which protects the DNA in the rest of the chromosome from damage 92 nbsp grid cell firing rate across spaceGrid cells May Britt Moser together with Edvard Moser and their students Torkel Hafting Marianne Fyhn and Sturla Molden discovered grid cells cells which contribute to the brain s positioning and navigation system The grid cells of a freely moving animal fire when the animal is near the vertices of a hexagonal grid in the environment 93 CRISPR gene editing CRISPR cas9 invented by Jennifer Anne Doudna and Emmanuelle CharpentierPsychology editMyers Briggs Type Indicator MBTI Katharine Cook Briggs and her daughter Isabel Briggs Myers invented this psychological test where participants answer an introspective self report questionnaire The result takes the form of 16 types indicating the psychological preferences of the participant See also editWomen in science Women s history List of women s firsts History of women in engineeringReferences edit Francoise Barre Sinoussi Facts www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 08 de Clercq Erik Field Hugh J 5 October 2005 Antiviral prodrugs the development of successful prodrug strategies for antiviral chemotherapy British Journal of Pharmacology Vol 147 no 1 Wiley Blackwell published January 2006 pp 1 11 doi 10 1038 sj bjp 0706446 PMC 1615839 PMID 16284630 Youyou Tu Facts www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 08 George Hitchings and Gertrude Elion Science History Institute June 2016 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Axelrad JE Lichtiger S Yajnik V 28 May 2016 Inflammatory bowel disease and cancer The role of inflammation immunosuppression and cancer treatment World Journal of Gastroenterology Review 22 20 4794 801 doi 10 3748 wjg v22 i20 4794 PMC 4873872 PMID 27239106 Singer O McCune WJ May 2017 Update on maintenance therapy for granulomatosis with polyangiitis and microscopic polyangiitis Current Opinion in Rheumatology 29 3 248 253 doi 10 1097 BOR 0000000000000382 PMID 28306595 S2CID 35805200 Chemical amp Engineering News Top Pharmaceuticals 6 Mercaptopurine pubs acs org Retrieved 2018 08 07 a b Vasudevan D M Sreekumari S Vaidyanathan Kannan 2013 Textbook of Biochemistry for Medical Students JP Medical Ltd p 491 ISBN 9789350905302 OCLC 843532694 Archived from the original on September 8 2017 Retrieved January 15 2016 Physiology or Medicine 1988 Press Release www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 07 AZT drug Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2018 08 07 Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division New York World Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection Blattman Elissa 2013 Three Every day Items Invented by Women National Women s History Museum The History of Paddi paddi org uk Archived from the original on April 4 2012 Retrieved August 1 2012 BBC Radio4 Home truth Nappy days Retrieved October 20 2011 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Goss W M William Miller McGee Richard X 2010 Under the radar the first woman in radio astronomy Ruby Payne Scott Springer ISBN 978 3 642 03140 3 a b Chown Marcus 2009 We Need to Talk About Kelvin faber and faber pp 99 100 Russell Henry 1929 On the Composition of the Suns Atmosphere Astrophysical Journal 70 11 Bibcode 1929ApJ 70 11R doi 10 1086 143197 Padman R 2004 Cecilia Payne Gaposchkin 1900 1979 Newnham College Biographies Newnham College Retrieved 2010 03 05 A friend to the stars Cecilia Payne Gaposchkin epigenesys eu Archived from the original on 2015 03 07 Retrieved 2014 09 22 Milky Way spiral gets an extra arm New Scientist London UK 9 May 2004 Retrieved 24 November 2015 F Rayner Canham Marelene 1998 Women in chemistry their changing roles from alchemical times to the mid twentieth century Rayner Canham Geoffrey Washington DC American Chemical Society ISBN 978 0841235229 OCLC 38886653 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Byers Moszkowski Wong Fanny Cook Gates 1872 1931 Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics CWP at UCLA Retrieved 2014 02 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Brenner David J 2000 Rutherford the Curies and Radon Medical Physics 27 3 618 Bibcode 2000MedPh 27 618B doi 10 1118 1 598902 ISSN 0094 2405 PMID 10757614 Curie P Curie Mme Marie 1899 Sur la radioactivite provoquee par les rayons de Becquerel Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l Academie des Sciences 129 714 6 Freier Phyllis Lofgren E J Ney E P Oppenheimer F Bradt H L Peters B 1948 07 15 Evidence for Heavy Nuclei in the Primary Cosmic Radiation Physical Review 74 2 213 217 Bibcode 1948PhRv 74 213F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 74 213 Maurice Goldhaber American physicist Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2018 10 14 Campagnari Claudio Franklin Melissa 1997 01 01 The discovery of the top quark Reviews of Modern Physics 69 1 137 212 arXiv hep ex 9608003 Bibcode 1997RvMP 69 137C doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 69 137 S2CID 45098995 Lene Hau Physikerin Berta Karlik lise univie ac at Hendrika Johanna van Leeuwen 1919 Vraagstukken uit de electronentheorie van het magnetisme PDF in Dutch van Leeuwen Hendrika Johanna 1921 Problemes de la theorie electronique du magnetisme Journal de Physique et le Radium 2 12 361 377 doi 10 1051 jphysrad 01921002012036100 S2CID 97259591 Greenwood Veronique 3 December 2014 My Great Great Aunt Discovered Francium It Killed Her New York Times Magazine Frisch O R 1939 Physical Evidence for the Division of Heavy Nuclei under Neutron Bombardment Nature 143 3616 276 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 276F doi 10 1038 143276a0 The experiment for this letter to the editor was conducted on 13 January 1939 see Richard Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb 263 and 268 Simon and Schuster 1986 Lise Meitner Dies Atomic Pioneer 89 Lise Meitner Physicist Is Dead Paved Way for Splitting of Atom The New York Times 28 October 1968 Retrieved 18 April 2008 Dr Lise Meitner the Austrian born nuclear physicist who first calculated the enormous energy released by splitting the uranium atom died today in a Cambridge nursing home She was 89 years old Glanz James April 11 2000 Halo Reveals Remains of Milky Way s Galactic Snacks The New York Times Retrieved November 15 2011 Newberg Heidi Jo Yanny Brian Rockosi Connie Grebel Eva K Rix Hans Walter Brinkmann Jon Csabai Istvan Hennessy Greg Hindsley Robert B Ibata Rodrigo Ivezic Zeljko Lamb Don Nash E Thomas Odenkirchen Michael Rave Heather A Schneider D P Smith J Allyn Stolte Andrea York Donald G April 10 2002 The Ghost of Sagittarius and Lumps in the Halo of the Milky Way Astrophysical Journal 569 1 245 274 arXiv astro ph 0111095 Bibcode 2002ApJ 569 245N doi 10 1086 338983 S2CID 16909562 Wilford John Noble January 14 2003 In Galaxies Near and Far New Views of Universe Emerge The New York Times Retrieved November 15 2011 Carlisle Camille M March 16 2015 Ripples in the Milky Way Sky amp Telescope Retrieved 2015 03 20 The Nobel Prize in Physics 2018 NobelPrize org Retrieved 2018 10 03 A Ghiorso J M Nitschke J R Alonso C T Alonso M Nurmia G T Seaborg E K Hulet and R W Lougheed Physical Review Letters 33 1490 1974 Knight Margaret E Encyclopaedia Britannica 2005 Encyclopaedia Britannica Premium Svs article 9125831 Bellis Mary 2011 Sarah Boone Inventors About com Archived from the original on January 8 2013 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Overlooked No More Bette Nesmith Graham Who Invented Liquid Paper The New York Times 11 July 2018 Retrieved 2018 08 20 Byrd Ayana D Tharps Lori L Hair Story Untangling the Roots of Black Hair in America New York St Martin s Press 2001 p 20 The Black Inventor Online Museum Blackinventor com Archived 2011 07 24 at the Wayback Machine Jewell H n d 18 Inventions By Women That Changed The World Retrieved April 17 2018 from https www buzzfeed com hannahjewell inventions by women that changed the world Chicago Tribune Dec 1992 Defying Stereotypes The Inventive Women Of America Archived 2023 02 20 at the Wayback Machine US Patent 3995 S P MATHER Submarine Telescope and Lamp Submarine Telescope in 1843 Jacquelyn A Greenblatt 1999 Women Scientists and Inventors Page 80 Good Year Books ISBN 9781596472631 Retrieved 2015 J Fuegi and J Francis October December 2003 Lovelace amp Babbage and the creation of the 1843 notes Annals of the History of Computing 25 4 16 26 doi 10 1109 MAHC 2003 1253887 S2CID 40077111 Bruderer Herbert Did Grace Hopper Create the First Compiler American Mathematical Society www ams org Retrieved 2018 08 19 von Kowalevsky Sophie 1875 Zur Theorie der partiellen Differentialgleichung Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik 80 1 32 Cauchy Augustin 1842 Memoire sur l emploi du calcul des limites dans l integration des equations aux derivees partielles Comptes Rendus 15 Audin Michele 1996 Spinning Tops A Course on Integrable Systems New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521779197 Whittaker E T 1952 A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521358835 Kovalevskaya Sofia 1889 Sur le probleme de la rotation d un corps solide autour d un point fixe Acta Mathematica 12 177 232 doi 10 1007 BF02592182 in French Perelemov A M 2002 Teoret Mat Fiz Volume 131 Number 2 pp 197 205 in French J G F Francis The QR Transformation I The Computer Journal 4 3 pages 265 271 1961 received October 1959 doi 10 1093 comjnl 4 3 265 Francis J G F 1962 The QR Transformation II The Computer Journal 4 4 332 345 doi 10 1093 comjnl 4 4 332 Vera N Kublanovskaya On some algorithms for the solution of the complete eigenvalue problem USSR Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics vol 1 no 3 pages 637 657 1963 received Feb 1961 Also published in Zhurnal Vychislitel noi Matematiki i Matematicheskoi Fiziki vol 1 no 4 pages 555 570 1961 doi 10 1016 0041 5553 63 90168 X Barany Michael 2018 The Fields Medal should return to its roots Nature 553 7688 271 273 Bibcode 2018Natur 553 271B doi 10 1038 d41586 018 00513 8 PMID 29345675 Olga Alexandrovna Ladyzhenskaya www agnesscott edu Retrieved 2018 08 21 Bigelow Stephen 2003 The Lawrence Krammer representation Topology and geometry of manifolds Proc Sympos Pure Math vol 71 Providence RI Amer Math Soc pp 51 68 arXiv math 0204057 doi 10 1090 pspum 071 2024629 MR 2024629 S2CID 118241294 Morris Edie Harkleroad Leon 1990 Rozsa Peter recursive function theory s founding mother The Mathematical Intelligencer 12 1 59 64 doi 10 1007 BF03023988 S2CID 120595680 Rozsa Peter Founder of Recursive Function Theory Women in Science A Selection of 16 Contributors San Diego Supercomputer Center 1997 Retrieved 23 August 2017 S Barry Cooper Computability theory p 98 The adjective optimum and not optimal is the slightly older form in English and avoids the construction optim um al there is no optimalis in Latin page x in Optimum Experimental Designs with SAS by Atkinson Donev and Tobias Guttorp P Lindgren G 2009 Karl Pearson and the Scandinavian school of statistics International Statistical Review 77 64 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 368 8328 doi 10 1111 j 1751 5823 2009 00069 x S2CID 121294724 Smith Kirstine 1918 On the standard deviations of adjusted and interpolated values of an observed polynomial function and its constants and the guidance they give towards a proper choice of the distribution of observations Biometrika 12 1 2 1 85 doi 10 2307 2331929 JSTOR 2331929 Allouche Jean Paul Shallit Jeffrey 2003 2 6 The Three Distance Theorem Automatic Sequences Theory Applications Generalizations Cambridge University Press pp 53 55 ISBN 9780521823326 Sos V T 1958 On the distribution mod 1 of the sequence na displaystyle n alpha nbsp Ann Univ Sci Budapest Eotvos Sect Math 1 127 134 Noether Emmy 1926 Der Endlichkeitsatz der Invarianten endlicher linearer Gruppen der Charakteristik p The finiteness theorem of the invariants of finite linear groups with the characteristic p Nachrichten von der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen in German 28 35 archived from the original on 8 March 2013 See also Noether s second theorem Noether E 1918 Invariante Variationsprobleme Nachr D Konig Gesellsch D Wiss Zu Gottingen Math phys Klasse 1918 235 257 Cosserat E Cosserat F 1909 Theorie des corps deformables Paris Hermann Thompson W J 1994 Angular Momentum an illustrated guide to rotational symmetries for physical systems Vol 1 Wiley p 5 ISBN 978 0 471 55264 2 Noether Emmy 1918 Invariante Variationsprobleme Nachr D Konig Gesellsch D Wiss Zu Gottingen Math phys Klasse 1918 235 257 Translated in Noether Emmy 1971 Invariant variation problems Transport Theory and Statistical Physics 1 3 186 207 arXiv physics 0503066 Bibcode 1971TTSP 1 186N doi 10 1080 00411457108231446 S2CID 119019843 Movie Legend Hedy Lamarr to be Given Special Award at EFF s Sixth Annual Pioneer Awards Press release Electronic Frontier Foundation 11 March 1997 Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Retrieved 1 February 2014 Rothman Tony Random Paths to Frequency Hopping Brush Stephen G June 1978 Nettie M Stevens and the Discovery of Sex Determination by Chromosomes Isis 69 2 163 172 doi 10 1086 352001 ISSN 0021 1753 PMID 389882 S2CID 1919033 Nelson David L amp Cox Michael M 2005 Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry Fourth Edition New York W H Freeman and Company p 543 Rosalyn Yalow Facts www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 07 Mills R E Bennett E A Iskow R C and Devine S E 2007 Which transposable elements are active in the human genome Trends in Genetics 23 4 183 191 doi 10 1016 j tig 2007 02 006 PMID 17331616 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link SanMiguel P Tikhonov A Jin YK et al November 1996 Nested retrotransposons in the intergenic regions of the maize genome Science 274 5288 765 8 Bibcode 1996Sci 274 765S doi 10 1126 science 274 5288 765 PMID 8864112 S2CID 33433647 Jiao Yinping Peluso Paul Shi Jinghua Liang Tiffany Stitzer Michelle C Wang Bo Campbell Michael S Stein Joshua C Wei Xuehong 2017 06 22 Improved maize reference genome with single molecule technologies Nature 546 7659 524 527 Bibcode 2017Natur 546 524J doi 10 1038 nature22971 ISSN 0028 0836 PMC 7052699 PMID 28605751 Bucher E Reinders J Mirouze M Nov 2012 Epigenetic control of transposon transcription and mobility in Arabidopsis Current Opinion in Plant Biology 15 5 503 10 doi 10 1016 j pbi 2012 08 006 PMID 22940592 Junk DNA Has Important Role Researchers Find Science Daily 21 May 2009 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1986 The Nobel Foundation Retrieved 1 January 2013 Physiology or Medicine 1995 Press Release www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 08 The 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Press Release www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 08 The 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Press Release www nobelprize org Retrieved 2018 08 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of inventions and discoveries by women amp oldid 1215474610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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