- Ahmed Zewail - Wikipedia
In January 2010, Ahmed Zewail, Elias Zerhouni, and Bruce Alberts became the first US science envoys to the Muslim world, visiting Muslim-majority countries from North Africa to Southeast Asia
- Ahmed Zewail – Facts - NobelPrize. org
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1999 was awarded to Ahmed H Zewail "for his studies of the transition states of chemical reactions using femtosecond spectroscopy"
- Ahmed H. Zewail | Nobel Prize-Winning Chemist | Britannica
Ahmed H Zewail (born February 26, 1946, Damanhur, Egypt—died August 2, 2016, Pasadena, California, U S ) was an Egyptian-born chemist who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1999 for developing a rapid laser technique that enabled scientists to study the action of atoms during chemical reactions
- Ahmed Zewail: The Noble Prize Winner Architect of Femtochemistry
Zewail’s pioneering research into the dynamics of chemical reactions at the atomic level earned him the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1999, making him the first Egyptian and the first Arab to receive the Nobel Prize in a scientific category
- First Arab Nobel science winner Ahmed Zewail dies - BBC News
A professor at the California Institute of Technology, he was a science advisor to President Obama and the first Arab scientist to win the Nobel Prize Mr Zewail became a naturalised
- Ahmed Zewail biography. Egyptian-American chemist, winner of the 1999 . . .
This work earned him the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Zewail became a respected and admired figure in both scientific and political circles He received numerous awards and accolades, including membership in the Russian Academy of Sciences (2003), and was deeply revered in his home country, Egypt Personal Life and Passing
- Ahmed Zewail - AUB
Professor Ahmed Zewail, winner of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, is both an Arab and an American Born in Egypt, Zewail is the first Arab to win a Nobel Prize in science
- Egyptian chemist Zewail, Nobel prize-winner, dies at 70
Egyptian-born Ahmed Zewail, a science adviser to President Obama who won the 1999 Nobel Prize for his work on the study of chemical reactions over immensely short time scales, died Tuesday, Aug 2, 2016
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