List of Fellows of the Royal Society
Encyclopedia
About 8,000 Fellows have been elected to the Royal Society of London since its inception in 1660. Below is an incomplete list of people who are or were notable Fellows or Foreign Members of the Royal Society. The date of election to the Fellowship follows the name. Dates in brackets relate to an award or event associated with the person.

Links to a complete alphabetic list are also provided. The Royal Society itself maintains complete online lists of current Fellows and of past and current Fellows.

Complete list

Complete List of Fellows of the Royal Society
A,B,C D,E,F G,H,I J,K,L M,N,O P,Q,R S,T,U,V W,X,Y,Z

A

  • Edgar Douglas Adrian, 1st Baron Adrian of Cambridge
    Edgar Adrian, 1st Baron Adrian
    Edgar Douglas Adrian, 1st Baron Adrian OM PRS was a British electrophysiologist and recipient of the 1932 Nobel Prize for Physiology, won jointly with Sir Charles Sherrington for work on the function of neurons....

    , 1923, President of the Royal Society (1950–1955)
  • Sir George Biddell Airy, 1836, President of the Royal Society (1871–1873)
  • Emmanuel Ciprian Amoroso, 1957, Trinidadian physiologist
  • Sir David Frederick Attenborough, 1983, naturalist and broadcaster
  • John James Audubon
    John James Audubon
    John James Audubon was a French-American ornithologist, naturalist, and painter. He was notable for his expansive studies to document all types of American birds and for his detailed illustrations that depicted the birds in their natural habitats...

    , 1830, naturalist and painter

B

  • Charles Babbage
    Charles Babbage
    Charles Babbage, FRS was an English mathematician, philosopher, inventor and mechanical engineer who originated the concept of a programmable computer...

    , 1816, mathematician and inventor, designed first programmable computer
  • Joseph Banks
    Joseph Banks
    Sir Joseph Banks, 1st Baronet, GCB, PRS was an English naturalist, botanist and patron of the natural sciences. He took part in Captain James Cook's first great voyage . Banks is credited with the introduction to the Western world of eucalyptus, acacia, mimosa and the genus named after him,...

    , 1766, naturalist, sailed with Captain Cook (1768-1771)
  • Max Born
    Max Born
    Max Born was a German-born physicist and mathematician who was instrumental in the development of quantum mechanics. He also made contributions to solid-state physics and optics and supervised the work of a number of notable physicists in the 1920s and 30s...

    , physicist, 1939, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1954)
  • Sydney Brenner
    Sydney Brenner
    Sydney Brenner, CH FRS is a South African biologist and a 2002 Nobel prize in Physiology or Medicine laureate, shared with H...

    , 1965, Nobel Prize (2002)
  • Isambard Kingdom Brunel
    Isambard Kingdom Brunel
    Isambard Kingdom Brunel, FRS , was a British civil engineer who built bridges and dockyards including the construction of the first major British railway, the Great Western Railway; a series of steamships, including the first propeller-driven transatlantic steamship; and numerous important bridges...

    , 1830, engineer and inventor, built Great Western Railway
  • Alan Baddeley
    Alan Baddeley
    Alan David Baddeley FRS, CBE is a British psychologist. He is professor of psychology at the University of York. He is known for his work on working memory, in particular for his multiple components model.-Education:...

    , 1993, Psychologist

C

  • Henry John Carter
    Henry John Carter
    Henry John Carter, FRS was a surgeon working in Bombay, India, who carried out work in geology and zoology. He worked as an army surgeon in Bombay from 1859 on Her Majesty's Indian Service, Bombay Establishment. He edited a collection of geological papers on Western India, including a summary of...

    , 1859, surgeon, geologist and zoologist
  • Henry Cavendish
    Henry Cavendish
    Henry Cavendish FRS was a British scientist noted for his discovery of hydrogen or what he called "inflammable air". He described the density of inflammable air, which formed water on combustion, in a 1766 paper "On Factitious Airs". Antoine Lavoisier later reproduced Cavendish's experiment and...

    , 1760, discoverer of hydrogen
  • Sir Ernst Boris Chain
    Ernst Boris Chain
    Sir Ernst Boris Chain was a German-born British biochemist, and a 1945 co-recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his work on penicillin.-Biography:...

    , 1949, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1965)
  • Sir Winston S. Churchill
    Winston Churchill
    Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, was a predominantly Conservative British politician and statesman known for his leadership of the United Kingdom during the Second World War. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest wartime leaders of the century and served as Prime Minister twice...

    , 1941, politician
  • Sir James Chadwick
    James Chadwick
    Sir James Chadwick CH FRS was an English Nobel laureate in physics awarded for his discovery of the neutron....

    , 1927, Nobel Prize (1935)
  • Sir Christopher Cockerell
    Christopher Cockerell
    Sir Christopher Sydney Cockerell CBE FRS was an English engineer, inventor of the hovercraft.-Life:Cockerell was born in Cambridge, where his father, Sir Sydney Cockerell, was curator of the Fitzwilliam Museum, having previously been the secretary of William Morris. Christopher Cockerell was...

    , 1967, inventor of the hovercraft
  • Captain James Cook
    James Cook
    Captain James Cook, FRS, RN was a British explorer, navigator and cartographer who ultimately rose to the rank of captain in the Royal Navy...

    , 1775, explorer and cartographer
  • John Lodge Cowley
    John Lodge Cowley
    John Lodge Cowley was an English cartographer, geologist and Mathematician.John Cowley was a professor of mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich – London for a number of years between 1761 and 1773. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in April, 1768...

    , 1768, cartographer, geologist and Mathematician.
  • Francis Crick
    Francis Crick
    Francis Harry Compton Crick OM FRS was an English molecular biologist, biophysicist, and neuroscientist, and most noted for being one of two co-discoverers of the structure of the DNA molecule in 1953, together with James D. Watson...

    , 1959, molecular biologist, co-discoverer of DNA

D

  • Henry Daniels, President of the Royal Statistical Society
    President of the Royal Statistical Society
    The President of the Royal Statistical Society is the head of the Royal Statistical Society , elected biannually by the Fellows of the Society. ....

     (1980)
  • John Dalton
    John Dalton
    John Dalton FRS was an English chemist, meteorologist and physicist. He is best known for his pioneering work in the development of modern atomic theory, and his research into colour blindness .-Early life:John Dalton was born into a Quaker family at Eaglesfield, near Cockermouth, Cumberland,...

    , 1822, chemist, developed atomic theory, researched colour blindness.
  • Charles Darwin
    Charles Darwin
    Charles Robert Darwin FRS was an English naturalist. He established that all species of life have descended over time from common ancestry, and proposed the scientific theory that this branching pattern of evolution resulted from a process that he called natural selection.He published his theory...

    , 1839, British naturalist
  • Dr Erasmus Darwin
    Erasmus Darwin
    Erasmus Darwin was an English physician who turned down George III's invitation to be a physician to the King. One of the key thinkers of the Midlands Enlightenment, he was also a natural philosopher, physiologist, slave trade abolitionist,inventor and poet...

    , 1761, physician, poet, inventor (grandfather of Charles Darwin)
  • Sir Humphry Davy
    Humphry Davy
    Sir Humphry Davy, 1st Baronet FRS MRIA was a British chemist and inventor. He is probably best remembered today for his discoveries of several alkali and alkaline earth metals, as well as contributions to the discoveries of the elemental nature of chlorine and iodine...

    , 1803, British chemist, PRS 1820-1827
  • Richard Dawkins
    Richard Dawkins
    Clinton Richard Dawkins, FRS, FRSL , known as Richard Dawkins, is a British ethologist, evolutionary biologist and author...

    , 2001, evolutionary biologist
  • Benjamin Disraeli, 1876, politician

E

  • Richard Lovell Edgeworth
    Richard Lovell Edgeworth
    Richard Lovell Edgeworth was an Anglo-Irish politician, writer and inventor.-Biography:Edgeworth was born in Pierrepont Street, Bath, England, grandson of Sir Salathiel Lovell through his daughter, Jane Lovell....

    , 1781, writer, inventor
  • Sir Michael Epstein
    Anthony Epstein
    Sir Michael Anthony Epstein CBE, FRS is one of the discoverers of the Epstein-Barr virus.Epstein was educated at St. Paul's School in London, Trinity College, Cambridge and Middlesex Hospital Medical School. Epstein was Professor of Pathology, 1968-85 , and Head of Department, 1968-82 at the...

    , 1979, pathologist, virologist, Vice-President of the Royal Society (1986–1991)

F

  • Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, 1724, German physicist and engineer
  • Michael Faraday
    Michael Faraday
    Michael Faraday, FRS was an English chemist and physicist who contributed to the fields of electromagnetism and electrochemistry....

    , 1824, Chemist
  • Sir Monty Finniston
    Monty Finniston
    Sir Harold Montague "Monty" Finniston was a British industrialist born in Glasgow, Scotland.Monty Finniston read metallurgical chemistry at Glasgow University, where he gained his PhD and then lectured in metallurgy. He spent the years of the Second World War in the Royal Naval Scientific Service...

    , 1969, Vice-President of the Royal Society (1971–1972)
  • Sir Ronald Fisher
    Ronald Fisher
    Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher FRS was an English statistician, evolutionary biologist, eugenicist and geneticist. Among other things, Fisher is well known for his contributions to statistics by creating Fisher's exact test and Fisher's equation...

    , 1929, statistician and evolutionary biologist
  • Sir Alexander Fleming
    Alexander Fleming
    Sir Alexander Fleming was a Scottish biologist and pharmacologist. He wrote many articles on bacteriology, immunology, and chemotherapy...

    , 1943, discoverer of penicillin, Nobel Prize (1945)
  • Sir Otto Frankel
    Otto Frankel
    Sir Otto Herzberg Frankel was an Austrian-born Australian geneticist.- Early life and family :...

    , 1953, geneticist
  • Benjamin Franklin
    Benjamin Franklin
    Dr. Benjamin Franklin was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. A noted polymath, Franklin was a leading author, printer, political theorist, politician, postmaster, scientist, musician, inventor, satirist, civic activist, statesman, and diplomat...

    , 1756, nature of electricity, one of few colonial Fellows

G

  • Dennis Gabor
    Dennis Gabor
    Dennis Gabor CBE, FRS was a Hungarian-British electrical engineer and inventor, most notable for inventing holography, for which he later received the 1971 Nobel Prize in Physics....

    , 1952, physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1971)
  • H.J. Gough
    H.J. Gough
    Herbert John Gough, CB, MBE, FRS was a British engineer, and research director.-Life:Born Bermondsey, London, he attended the Regent Street Polytechnic, and won a scholarship to University College London. In 1909, he became an apprentice at Vickers, Sons in 1913. He graduated from the University...

    , 1933, engineer at NPL, director of scientific research at the Ministry of Supply
    Ministry of Supply
    The Ministry of Supply was a department of the UK Government formed in 1939 to co-ordinate the supply of equipment to all three British armed forces, headed by the Minister of Supply. There was, however, a separate ministry responsible for aircraft production and the Admiralty retained...

    , and pioneer in metal fatigue
    Metal Fatigue
    Metal Fatigue , is a futuristic science fiction, real-time strategy computer game developed by Zono Incorporated and published by Psygnosis and TalonSoft .-Plot:...

  • Henry Gray
    Henry Gray
    Henry Gray was an English anatomist and surgeon most notable for publishing the book Gray's Anatomy. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society at the age of 25.-Biography:...

    , 1852, anatomist and surgeon
  • Augustus Bozzi Granville
    Augustus Granville
    Augustus Bozzi Granville MD, FRS was a physician, writer, and Italian patriot.Born in Milan, he studied medicine before leaving to avoid being enlisted in Napoleon's army. After practicing medicine in Greece, Turkey, Spain, and Portugal, he joined the British Navy and sailed to the West Indies...

    , 1817, physician and writer

  • Michael Green
    Michael Green (physicist)
    Michael Boris Green FRS is a British physicist and one of the pioneers of string theory. Currently a professor in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics and a Fellow in Clare Hall at the University of Cambridge in England, he succeeded Stephen Hawking on 1 November 2009...

    , 1989, string theorist
  • Sir Ludwig Guttmann
    Ludwig Guttmann
    Sir Ludwig "Poppa" Guttmann CBE, FRS was a German neurologist who founded the Paralympic Games while living in England, and is considered one of the founding fathers of organized physical activities for people with a disability....

    , 1976, neurologist

H

  • Stephen Hawking
    Stephen Hawking
    Stephen William Hawking, CH, CBE, FRS, FRSA is an English theoretical physicist and cosmologist, whose scientific books and public appearances have made him an academic celebrity...

    , 1974, theoretical physicist
  • Sir William Herschel
    William Herschel
    Sir Frederick William Herschel, KH, FRS, German: Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel was a German-born British astronomer, technical expert, and composer. Born in Hanover, Wilhelm first followed his father into the Military Band of Hanover, but emigrated to Britain at age 19...

    , 1781, astronomer, discoverer of Uranus
  • Sir Ian Heilbron
    Ian Heilbron
    Sir Ian Morris Heilbron DSO FRS was a British chemist and a Fellow of the Royal Society . He was knighted in 1946...

    , 1931, chemist
  • Sir Peter Hirsch
    Peter Hirsch
    Sir Peter Bernhard Hirsch FRS is a leading figure in British materials science who has made fundamental contributions to the application of transmission electron microscopy to metals....

    , 1963, material science
  • Dorothy Hodgkin, 1947, chemist, proved structure of insulin, penicillin and vitamin B12. Nobel Prize (1964)
  • Sir Fred Hoyle
    Fred Hoyle
    Sir Fred Hoyle FRS was an English astronomer and mathematician noted primarily for his contribution to the theory of stellar nucleosynthesis and his often controversial stance on other cosmological and scientific matters—in particular his rejection of the "Big Bang" theory, a term originally...

    , 1957, astronomer and cosmologist, rejected "Big-bang theory"
  • Robert Hooke
    Robert Hooke
    Robert Hooke FRS was an English natural philosopher, architect and polymath.His adult life comprised three distinct periods: as a scientific inquirer lacking money; achieving great wealth and standing through his reputation for hard work and scrupulous honesty following the great fire of 1666, but...

    , 1664, natural philosopher, architect and polymath.

I

  • Alick Isaacs
    Alick Isaacs
    Alick Isaacs was a British virologist. He is best remembered for his work on interferon, having been Head of the Laboratory for Research on Interferon, National Institute for Medical Research, 1964–7....

    , 1966, virologist, interferon
    Interferon
    Interferons are proteins made and released by host cells in response to the presence of pathogens—such as viruses, bacteria, or parasites—or tumor cells. They allow communication between cells to trigger the protective defenses of the immune system that eradicate pathogens or tumors.IFNs belong to...

  • Sir Alec Arnold Constantine Issigonis, 1967, engineer, designed the BMC Mini

J

  • Daniel Ernst Jablonski
    Daniel Ernst Jablonski
    Daniel Ernst Jablonski , German theologian and reformer of Czech origin, known for his efforts to bring about a union between Lutheran and Calvinist Protestants.-Life:...

    , 1713, German theologian, and reformer,
  • Edward Jenner
    Edward Jenner
    Edward Anthony Jenner was an English scientist who studied his natural surroundings in Berkeley, Gloucestershire...

    , 1789, physician, pioneer of vaccination
  • Alexander Robert Johnston
    Alexander Robert Johnston
    Alexander Robert Campbell-Johnston was a British colonial official who served twice as acting administrator of the former British colony of Hong Kong from 1841 to 1842...

    , 1845, diplomat
  • Dame Carole Jordan
    Carole Jordan
    Professor Dame Carole Jordan, DBE, FRS, FInstP, was the first ever female president of the Royal Astronomical Society. She was also only the third female recipient of its Gold Medal .-Education:Carole Jordan was educated at Harrow County Grammar School for Girls and at University College London...

    , 1990, astrophysicist
  • Brian David Josephson
    Brian David Josephson
    Brian David Josephson, FRS is a Welsh physicist. He became a Nobel Prize laureate in 1973 for the prediction of the eponymous Josephson effect....

    , 1970, physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1973)
  • Anthony Trafford, JAMES CBE, PhD, formerly Head of Division of Biosciences, Unilever's Colworth House Laboratories. [1975]

K

  • Sir Bernard Katz
    Bernard Katz
    Sir Bernard Katz, FRS was a German-born biophysicist, noted for his work on nerve biochemistry. He shared the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine in 1970 with Julius Axelrod and Ulf von Euler...

    , 1952, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     for Medicine (1970)
  • Olga Kennard
    Olga Kennard
    Olga Kennard, née Weisz is a British crystallographer, and was Director of the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre from 1965 to 1997.She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1987 and awarded the OBE in 1988...

    , 1987, crystallographer
  • Sir Aaron Klug
    Aaron Klug
    Sir Aaron Klug, OM, PRS is a Lithuanian-born British chemist and biophysicist, and winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his development of crystallographic electron microscopy and his structural elucidation of biologically important nucleic acid-protein complexes.-Biography:Klug was...

    , 1969, chemist, Nobel Prize (1982), President of Royal Society (1995–2000)
  • Hans Kosterlitz, 1978, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1953)
  • Sir John Krebs
    John Krebs
    John Richard Krebs, Baron Krebs FRS is a world leader in zoology and more specifically bird behaviour. He is currently the Principal of Jesus College, Oxford University...

    , 1984, biologist
  • Harold Kroto
    Harold Kroto
    Sir Harold Walter Kroto, FRS , born Harold Walter Krotoschiner, is a British chemist and one of the three recipients to share the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Robert Curl and Richard Smalley....

    , 1990, chemist, Nobel Prize (1996)
  • Nicholas Kurti
    Nicholas Kurti
    Professor Nicholas Kurti FRS was a Hungarian-born physicist who lived in Oxford, UK, for most of his life. In his era, he was one of the leading experimental physicists....

    , 1956, physicist, Vice-President of Royal Society (1965–67)
  • Ondrej Krivanek
    Ondrej Krivanek
    Ondrej L. Krivanek FRS is a Czech/British physicist resident in the United States, and a leading developer of electron-optical instrumentation....

    , 2010, physicist

L

  • Michael Land
    Michael F. Land
    Michael Francis Land FRS is a British neurobiologist. He is currently Emeritus Professor of Neurobiology in the Sussex Vision laboratory at the Sussex Centre for Neuroscience, University of Sussex, England....

    , 1982, neurobiologist
  • Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, 1788, French chemist,recognised Oxygen, guillotined.
  • Richard Leakey
    Richard Leakey
    Richard Erskine Frere Leakey is a politician, paleoanthropologist and conservationist. He is second of the three sons of the archaeologists Louis Leakey and Mary Leakey, and is the younger brother of Colin Leakey...

    , 2007, paleoanthropologist
  • Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell
    Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell
    Frederick Alexander Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell FRS PC CH was an English physicist who was an influential scientific adviser to the British government, particularly Winston Churchill...

    , 1920, physicist
  • Carl Linnaeus, 1753, Swedish botanist and zoologist, developed taxonomy
  • Joseph Lister, 1860, surgeon, pioneer of antiseptic surgery
  • David Livingstone
    David Livingstone
    David Livingstone was a Scottish Congregationalist pioneer medical missionary with the London Missionary Society and an explorer in Africa. His meeting with H. M. Stanley gave rise to the popular quotation, "Dr...

    , 1858, missionary and explorer
  • John Locke
    John Locke
    John Locke FRS , widely known as the Father of Liberalism, was an English philosopher and physician regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers. Considered one of the first of the British empiricists, following the tradition of Francis Bacon, he is equally important to social...

    , 1668, philosopher and physician

M

  • Stanley Mandelstam
    Stanley Mandelstam
    Stanley Mandelstam is a South African-born theoretical physicist. He introduced the relativistically invariant Mandelstam variables into particle physics in 1958 as a convenient coordinate system for formulating his double dispersion relations...

    , 1962, theoretical physicist
  • James Clerk Maxwell
    James Clerk Maxwell
    James Clerk Maxwell of Glenlair was a Scottish physicist and mathematician. His most prominent achievement was formulating classical electromagnetic theory. This united all previously unrelated observations, experiments and equations of electricity, magnetism and optics into a consistent theory...

    , 1861, physicist , developed electromagnetic theory
  • Sir Robert Menzies
    Robert Menzies
    Sir Robert Gordon Menzies, , Australian politician, was the 12th and longest-serving Prime Minister of Australia....

    , 1965, twelfth Prime Minister of Australia
    Prime Minister of Australia
    The Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of Australia is the highest minister of the Crown, leader of the Cabinet and Head of Her Majesty's Australian Government, holding office on commission from the Governor-General of Australia. The office of Prime Minister is, in practice, the most powerful...

  • Sir Robert Mond
    Robert Mond
    Sir Robert Ludwig Mond FRS, FRSE was a British chemist and archaeologist.-Early life and education:Robert Mond was born at Farnworth, Widnes, Lancashire, the elder son of Ludwig Mond, chemist and industrialist...

    , 1938, chemist and archaeologist
  • Sir Patrick Moore
    Patrick Moore
    Sir Patrick Alfred Caldwell-Moore, CBE, FRS, FRAS is a British amateur astronomer who has attained prominent status in astronomy as a writer, researcher, radio commentator and television presenter of the subject, and who is credited as having done more than any other person to raise the profile of...

    , 2001, astronomer and broadcaster

N

  • John Nelder
    John Nelder
    John Ashworth Nelder FRS was a British statistician known for his contributions to experimental design, analysis of variance, computational statistics, and statistical theory.-Contributions:...

    , 1976, statistician
  • Albert Neuberger
    Albert Neuberger
    Albert Neuberger CBE FRS FRCP was Professor of Chemical Pathology, St Mary's Hospital, University of London, 1955–1973, and later Emeritus Professor.-Education in Germany:...

    , 1951, chemical pathologist
  • Michael Neuberger
    Michael Neuberger
    Michael Samuel Neuberger FRS is a British biochemist and immunologist.-Education:He was educated at Westminster School, and then read Natural Sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge as a scholar where he obtained a Master of Arts; he then obtained a PhD at Imperial College, London.-Career:He has...

    , 1993, biochemist
  • Bernhard Neumann
    Bernhard Neumann
    Bernhard Hermann Neumann AC FRS was a German-born British mathematician who was one of the leading figures in group theory, greatly influencing the direction of the subject....

    , 1959, mathematician
  • Sir Isaac Newton
    Isaac Newton
    Sir Isaac Newton PRS was an English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, natural philosopher, alchemist, and theologian, who has been "considered by many to be the greatest and most influential scientist who ever lived."...

    , 1672, PRS 1703-1727, natural philosopher, mathematician, astronomer, physicist
  • Sir Gustav Nossal
    Gustav Nossal
    Sir Gustav Victor Joseph Nossal, AC, CBE, FRS, FAA is an Australian research biologist.-Life and career:Gustav Nossal's family was from Vienna, Austria. He was born four weeks prematurely in Bad Ischl while his mother was on holiday...

    , 1982, biologist

P

  • Samuel Pepys
    Samuel Pepys
    Samuel Pepys FRS, MP, JP, was an English naval administrator and Member of Parliament who is now most famous for the diary he kept for a decade while still a relatively young man...

    , 1665, administrator, MP and diarist. President of the Royal Society (1684–1686)
  • Max Perutz
    Max Perutz
    Max Ferdinand Perutz, OM, CH, CBE, FRS was an Austrian-born British molecular biologist, who shared the 1962 Nobel Prize for Chemistry with John Kendrew, for their studies of the structures of hemoglobin and globular proteins...

    , 1954, chemist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1962)
  • John Charles Polanyi
    John Charles Polanyi
    John Charles Polanyi, PC, CC, FRSC, O.Ont, FRS, born January 23, 1929) is a Canadian chemist who won the 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, for his research in chemical kinetics. Polanyi was educated at Manchester University, and did postdoctoral research at the National Research Council in Canada and...

    , 1971, chemist, Nobel Prize (1986)
  • Martyn Poliakoff
    Martyn Poliakoff
    Martyn Poliakoff CBE FRS is a British chemist, working on gaining insights into fundamental chemistry and also on developing environmentally acceptable processes and materials. The core themes of his work are supercritical fluids , infrared spectroscopy and lasers. He is a Research Professor in...

    , 2002, chemist
  • Sir Karl Popper
    Karl Popper
    Sir Karl Raimund Popper, CH FRS FBA was an Austro-British philosopher and a professor at the London School of Economics...

    , 1976, philosopher of science
  • Thomas Povey
    Thomas Povey
    Thomas Povey FRS, was a London merchant-politician who was active in colonial affairs from the 1650s, but neutral enough in his politics to be named a member from 1660 of Charles II's Council for Foreign Plantations, making him a powerful figure in the not-yet professionalized First English...

    , original member
  • Joseph Priestley
    Joseph Priestley
    Joseph Priestley, FRS was an 18th-century English theologian, Dissenting clergyman, natural philosopher, chemist, educator, and political theorist who published over 150 works...

    , 1766, natural philosopher, discoverer of oxygen.

R

  • Srinivasa Ramanujan
    Srinivasa Ramanujan
    Srīnivāsa Aiyangār Rāmānujan FRS, better known as Srinivasa Iyengar Ramanujan was a Indian mathematician and autodidact who, with almost no formal training in pure mathematics, made extraordinary contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series and continued fractions...

    , 1918, Mathematician - India
  • Sir C.V. Raman, 1929, Nobel Laureate in physics - India
  • Derek Roberts
    Derek Roberts
    Derek Roberts twice served as provost of University College London, firstly from 1989 to 1999 and later from 2002 to 2003....

    , 1980, Engineer
  • Sir Joseph Rotblat
    Joseph Rotblat
    Sir Joseph Rotblat, KCMG, CBE, FRS , was a Polish-born, British-naturalised physicist.His work on nuclear fallout was a major contribution to the agreement of the Partial Test Ban Treaty...

    , 1995, founder of Pugwash conference, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     for Peace (1995)
  • Dame Miriam Louisa Rothschild, 1985, entomologist, zoologist
  • Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild
    Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild
    Nathaniel Mayer Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild, GBE, GM, FRS was a biologist by training, a cricketer and a member of the prominent Rothschild family...

    , 1953
  • Bertrand Russell, 3rd Earl Russell, 1908, philosopher
  • Philip Russell
    Philip Russell
    Philip St. John Russell, FRS, is the Director of the third division of the Max Planck Research Group at the Institute of Optics, Information and Photonics at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg. His area of research is "photonics and new materials"...

    , 2005, physicist
  • Baron Sir Ernest Rutherford
    Ernest Rutherford
    Ernest Rutherford, 1st Baron Rutherford of Nelson OM, FRS was a New Zealand-born British chemist and physicist who became known as the father of nuclear physics...

    , 1903, nuclear physicist

S

  • Adam Smith
    Adam Smith
    Adam Smith was a Scottish social philosopher and a pioneer of political economy. One of the key figures of the Scottish Enlightenment, Smith is the author of The Theory of Moral Sentiments and An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations...

    , 1767, political economist
  • Julius von Sachs
    Julius von Sachs
    Julius von Sachs was a German botanist from Breslau, Prussian Silesia.At an early age he showed a taste for natural history, becoming acquainted with the Breslau physiologist Jan Evangelista Purkyně. In 1851 he began studying at Charles University in Prague...

    , 1888, German botanist
  • Sir Robert Hermann Schomburgk
    Robert Hermann Schomburgk
    Sir Robert Hermann Schomburgk , was a German-born explorer for Great Britain who carried out geographical, ethnological and botanical studies in South America and the West Indies, and also fulfilled diplomatic missions for Great Britain in the Dominican Republic and Thailand.-Biography:Schomburgk...

    , 1859, German explorer
    Exploration
    Exploration is the act of searching or traveling around a terrain for the purpose of discovery of resources or information. Exploration occurs in all non-sessile animal species, including humans...

  • Sir Peter Markham Scott, 1987, naturalist and painter
  • Robert Stephenson
    Robert Stephenson
    Robert Stephenson FRS was an English civil engineer. He was the only son of George Stephenson, the famed locomotive builder and railway engineer; many of the achievements popularly credited to his father were actually the joint efforts of father and son.-Early life :He was born on the 16th of...

    ,1849, pioneer railway engineer
  • Satyendra Nath Bose
    Satyendra Nath Bose
    Satyendra Nath Bose FRS was an Indian mathematician and physicist noted for his collaboration with Albert Einstein in developing a theory regarding the gaslike qualities of electromagnetic radiation. He is best known for his work on quantum mechanics in the early 1920s, providing the foundation...

    , 1958, physicist - India

T

  • William Henry Fox Talbot, 1831, pioneer of photography
  • Richard Taylor
    Richard Taylor (mathematician)
    -External links:**...

    , 1995, mathematician
  • Baroness Lady Margaret Thatcher
    Margaret Thatcher
    Margaret Hilda Thatcher, Baroness Thatcher, was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990...

    , 1983, chemist and politician
  • Sir J.J. Thomson, 1884, physicist, discovered the electron, Nobel Prize (1906)
  • William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin
    William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin
    William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin OM, GCVO, PC, PRS, PRSE, was a mathematical physicist and engineer. At the University of Glasgow he did important work in the mathematical analysis of electricity and formulation of the first and second laws of thermodynamics, and did much to unify the emerging...

    , 1851, physicist and engineer

V

  • Sir John Vane, 1974, medicine, Nobel Prize (1982)
  • S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan
    S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan
    Sathamangalam Ranga Iyengar Srinivasa Varadhan FRS is an Indian-American mathematician from Madras , Tamil Nadu, India.-Biography:...

    , 1998, mathematics, Abel Prize (2007)
  • Baron Sir Ferdinand Jacob Heinrich von Mueller, 1861, botanist

W

  • Sir Robert Alexander Watson-Watt, 1941, electronics engineer, pioneer of radar
  • Sir Frank Whittle
    Frank Whittle
    Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle, OM, KBE, CB, FRS, Hon FRAeS was a British Royal Air Force engineer officer. He is credited with independently inventing the turbojet engine Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle, OM, KBE, CB, FRS, Hon FRAeS (1 June 1907 – 9 August 1996) was a British Royal Air...

    , 1947, aircraft engineer, jet-engine pioneer
  • James Watt
    James Watt
    James Watt, FRS, FRSE was a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer whose improvements to the Newcomen steam engine were fundamental to the changes brought by the Industrial Revolution in both his native Great Britain and the rest of the world.While working as an instrument maker at the...

    , 1785, inventor and engineer
  • Josiah Wedgwood
    Josiah Wedgwood
    Josiah Wedgwood was an English potter, founder of the Wedgwood company, credited with the industrialization of the manufacture of pottery. A prominent abolitionist, Wedgwood is remembered for his "Am I Not A Man And A Brother?" anti-slavery medallion. He was a member of the Darwin–Wedgwood family...

    , 1783, pottery manufacturer
  • Sir Isaac Wolfson
    Isaac Wolfson
    Sir Isaac Wolfson, 1st Baronet FRS was a businessman and philanthropist. He was managing director of Great Universal Stores 1932-1947 and chairman 1947-1987. He established the Wolfson Foundation to distribute most of his fortune to good causes. Great Universal Stores was a mail order business...

    , 1963, businessman and philanthropist
  • Sir Christopher Wren
    Christopher Wren
    Sir Christopher Wren FRS is one of the most highly acclaimed English architects in history.He used to be accorded responsibility for rebuilding 51 churches in the City of London after the Great Fire in 1666, including his masterpiece, St. Paul's Cathedral, on Ludgate Hill, completed in 1710...

    , 1663, architect, designed St Pauls Cathedral

Y

  • Magdi Yacoub
    Magdi Yacoub
    Sir Magdi Habib Yacoub, FRS , is Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery at Imperial College London.Yacoub's major achievements may be summarised:1. Established Heart Transplantation in UK and became leading transplant surgeon in the world....

    , 1999, heart surgeon
  • Thomas Young
    Thomas Young (scientist)
    Thomas Young was an English polymath. He is famous for having partly deciphered Egyptian hieroglyphics before Jean-François Champollion eventually expanded on his work...

    , 1794, physicist

Z

  • Oliver Zangwill
    Oliver Zangwill
    Oliver Louis Zangwill FRS was an influential British neuropsychologist. He was Professor of Experimental Psychology, University of Cambridge, 1952-81, then Professor Emeritus. He was the son of Israel Zangwill and the grandson of William Edward Ayrton...

    , 1967, psychologist
  • Solly Zuckerman, life Baron Zuckerman
    Solly Zuckerman
    Solly Zuckerman, Baron Zuckerman, OM, KCB, FRS was a British public servant, zoologist, and scientific advisor who is best remembered as an advisor to the Allies on bombing strategy in World War II, for his work to advance the cause of nuclear non-proliferation, and for his role in bringing...

    , 1943, anatomist, evolutionist

A

  • Anatole Abragam
    Anatole Abragam
    Anatole Abragam was a French physicist who wrote The Principles of Nuclear Magnetism and has made significant contributions to the field of nuclear magnetic resonance. Originally from Russia, Abragam and his family emigrated to France in 1925.After being educated at the University of Paris, , he...

    , 1983, French physicist, Lorentz Medal
    Lorentz Medal
    Lorentz Medal is a prize awarded every four years by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. It was established in 1925 on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the doctorate of Hendrik Lorentz. This solid gold medal is given for important contributions to theoretical physics, though...

     (1982), leader in study of nuclear magnetic resonance
    Nuclear magnetic resonance
    Nuclear magnetic resonance is a physical phenomenon in which magnetic nuclei in a magnetic field absorb and re-emit electromagnetic radiation...

  • Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov
    Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov
    Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov is a Soviet and Russian theoretical physicist whose main contributions are in the field of condensed matter physics. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2003.- Biography :...

    , 2001, Russian physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (2003)
  • Per Oskar Andersen
    Per Andersen
    Per Oskar Andersen is a Norwegian brain researcher at the University of Oslo. Research by his lab, specifically by Terje Lømo , led to the discovery of long-term potentiation in 1966.He is a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.He is also a fellow at the Royal...

    , 2002, Norwegian neurologist
  • Julius Axelrod
    Julius Axelrod
    Julius Axelrod was an American biochemist. He won a share of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1970 along with Bernard Katz and Ulf von Euler...

    , 1979, biochemist, pharmacologist, Nobel Prize (1970)
  • Atta ur Rahman
    Atta ur Rahman
    Atta-ur-Rahman, D.Phil., TI, SI HI, NI, is a leading scientist and scholar in the field of organic chemistry from Pakistan, especially renowned for his research in the various areas relating to natural product chemistry...

    , 2006, PhD Organic Chemistry, Pakistani leading Scientist

B

  • David Baltimore
    David Baltimore
    David Baltimore is an American biologist, university administrator, and Nobel laureate in Physiology or Medicine. He served as president of the California Institute of Technology from 1997 to 2006, and is currently the Robert A. Millikan Professor of Biology at Caltech...

    , 1987, U.S. biologist, retroviruses, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1975)
  • Grigory Barenblatt
    Grigory Barenblatt
    Grigory Isaakovich Barenblatt is a Russian mathematician. He graduated in 1950 from Moscow State University, Department of Mechanics and Mathematics. He received his Ph.D. in 1953 from Moscow State University under the supervision of A. N. Kolmogorov. He also received a D.Sc. from Moscow State...

    , 2000, Russian-U.S. mathematician
  • Seymour Benzer
    Seymour Benzer
    Seymour Benzer was an American physicist, molecular biologist and behavioral geneticist. His career began during the molecular biology revolution of the 1950s, and he eventually rose to prominence in the fields of molecular and behavioral genetics. He led a productive genetics research lab both at...

    , 1976, U.S. biophysicist, genetics
  • Paul Berg
    Paul Berg
    Paul Berg is an American biochemist and professor emeritus at Stanford University. He was the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1980, along with Walter Gilbert and Frederick Sanger. The award recognized their contributions to basic research involving nucleic acids...

    , 1992, chemist, Head of Human Genome Project, Nobel Prize (1980)
  • Hans Bethe
    Hans Bethe
    Hans Albrecht Bethe was a German-American nuclear physicist, and Nobel laureate in physics for his work on the theory of stellar nucleosynthesis. A versatile theoretical physicist, Bethe also made important contributions to quantum electrodynamics, nuclear physics, solid-state physics and...

    , 1957, German-U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize (1967)
  • Konrad Bloch, 1985, German biochemist, Nobel Prize (1964)
  • Michael Stuart Brown
    Michael Stuart Brown
    Michael Stuart Brown is an American geneticist and Nobel Laureate. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Joseph L. Goldstein in 1985 for describing the regulation of cholesterol metabolism.- Life and career :...

    , 1991, U.S. medicine Nobel Prize (1985)

C

  • Melvin Calvin
    Melvin Calvin
    Melvin Ellis Calvin was an American chemist most famed for discovering the Calvin cycle along with Andrew Benson and James Bassham, for which he was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He spent most of his five-decade career at the University of California, Berkeley.- Life :Calvin was born...

    , 1959, U.S. photosynthesis, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1961)
  • Ferdinand Cohn
    Ferdinand Cohn
    Ferdinand Julius Cohn was a German biologist.Cohn was born in Breslau in the Prussian Province of Silesia. At the age of 10 he suffered hearing impairment. He received a degree in botany in 1847 at the age of nineteen at the University of Berlin. He was a teacher and researcher at University of...

    , 1897, botanist, founder of the science of bacteriology

E

  • Albert Einstein
    Albert Einstein
    Albert Einstein was a German-born theoretical physicist who developed the theory of general relativity, effecting a revolution in physics. For this achievement, Einstein is often regarded as the father of modern physics and one of the most prolific intellects in human history...

    , 1921, German-U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1921)
  • Thomas Eisner
    Thomas Eisner
    Thomas Eisner was a German-American entomologist and ecologist, known as the "father of chemical ecology."He was a Jacob Gould Schurman Professor of Chemical Ecology at Cornell University, and Director of the Cornell Institute for Research in Chemical Ecology...

    , 1997, evolutionary biology
  • Paul Ehrlich
    Paul Ehrlich
    Paul Ehrlich was a German scientist in the fields of hematology, immunology, and chemotherapy, and Nobel laureate. He is noted for curing syphilis and for his research in autoimmunity, calling it "horror autotoxicus"...

    , 1910, immunology, haematology, Nobel Prize (1908)
  • Gertrude Elion, 1995, medicine, Nobel Prize (1988)
  • Paul Erdős
    Paul Erdos
    Paul Erdős was a Hungarian mathematician. Erdős published more papers than any other mathematician in history, working with hundreds of collaborators. He worked on problems in combinatorics, graph theory, number theory, classical analysis, approximation theory, set theory, and probability theory...

    , 1989, Hungarian-born Israeli U.S. mathematician

F

  • Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, 1724, physicist
  • Ugo Fano
    Ugo Fano
    Ugo Fano was an Italian American physicist, a leader in theoretical physics in the 20th century.- Biography :Ugo Fano was born into a wealthy Jewish family in Turin, Italy...

    , physicist
  • Richard Feynman
    Richard Feynman
    Richard Phillips Feynman was an American physicist known for his work in the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, the theory of quantum electrodynamics and the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, as well as in particle physics...

    , physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1965)
  • James Franck
    James Franck
    James Franck was a German Jewish physicist and Nobel laureate.-Biography:Franck was born to Jacob Franck and Rebecca Nachum Drucker. Franck completed his Ph.D...

    , 1964, German-born U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1925)
  • Sigmund Freud
    Sigmund Freud
    Sigmund Freud , born Sigismund Schlomo Freud , was an Austrian neurologist who founded the discipline of psychoanalysis...

    , 1936, neurologist, founder of psychoanalysis
  • Otto Frisch, 1948, Austrian-born British physicist

G

  • Herbert Gasser, 1946, medicine, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1944)
  • Murray Gell-Mann
    Murray Gell-Mann
    Murray Gell-Mann is an American physicist and linguist who received the 1969 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles...

    , 1978, U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize (1969)
  • Walter Gilbert
    Walter Gilbert
    Walter Gilbert is an American physicist, biochemist, molecular biology pioneer, and Nobel laureate.-Biography:Gilbert was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on March 21, 1932...

    , 1987, U.S. chemist, Nobel Prize (1980)
  • Vitaly Ginzburg
    Vitaly Ginzburg
    Vitaly Lazarevich Ginzburg ForMemRS was a Soviet theoretical physicist, astrophysicist, Nobel laureate, a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and one of the fathers of Soviet hydrogen bomb...

    , 1987, Russian physicist, Nobel Prize (2003)
  • Roy Glauber, 1997, U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize (2005)
  • Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch
    Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch
    Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch was a German-born U.S. geneticist and co-founder of developmental genetics.- Life and scientific career :...

    , 1995, German-born U.S. geneticist, co-founder of developmental genetics
  • Peter Goldreich
    Peter Goldreich
    Peter Goldreich is an American astrophysicist whose research focuses on celestial mechanics, planetary rings, helioseismology and neutron stars. He is currently the Lee DuBridge Professor of Astrophysics and Planetary Physics at California Institute of Technology. Since 2005 he has also been a...

    , 1904, U.S. astrophysicist
  • Victor Goldschmidt
    Victor Goldschmidt
    Victor Moritz Goldschmidt was a mineralogist considered to be the founder of modern geochemistry and crystal chemistry, developer of the Goldschmidt Classification of elements.-Early life & career:Goldschmidt was born in Zürich...

    , 1943, Swiss-born U.S. chemist, founder of modern geochemistry
  • Joseph L. Goldstein
    Joseph L. Goldstein
    Joseph L. Goldstein from Kingstree, South Carolina is a Nobel Prize winning biochemist and geneticist, and a pioneer in the study of cholesterol metabolism.-Biography:...

    , 1991, U.S. biologist, Nobel Prize (1985)

H

  • George de Hevesy
    George de Hevesy
    George Charles de Hevesy, Georg Karl von Hevesy, was a Hungarian radiochemist and Nobel laureate, recognized in 1943 for his key role in the development of radioactive tracers to study chemical processes such as in the metabolism of animals.- Early years :Hevesy György was born in Budapest,...

    , 1939, Hungarian-born Swedish chemist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1943)
  • Roald Hoffmann
    Roald Hoffmann
    Roald Hoffmann is an American theoretical chemist who won the 1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He currently teaches at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.-Escape from the Holocaust:...

    , 1984, Polish-born U.S. chemist, electronic structures, Nobel Prize (1981)
  • Erwin Hahn
    Erwin Hahn
    Erwin L. Hahn is a U.S. physicist, best known for his work on nuclear magnetic resonance . In 1950 he discovered the spin echo....

    , 2000, U.S. physicist, nuclear spin echoes, nuclear magnetic resonance

J

  • Francois Jacob
    François Jacob
    François Jacob is a French biologist who, together with Jacques Monod, originated the idea that control of enzyme levels in all cells occurs through feedback on transcription. He shared the 1965 Nobel Prize in Medicine with Jacques Monod and André Lwoff.-Childhood and education:François Jacob is...

    , 1973, French biologist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1965)
  • Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi
    Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi
    Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi was a German mathematician, widely considered to be the most inspiring teacher of his time and is considered one of the greatest mathematicians of his generation.-Biography:...

    , also called Karl Jacobi, 1833, German mathematician

K

  • Theodore von Kármán
    Theodore von Karman
    Theodore von Kármán was a Hungarian-American mathematician, aerospace engineer and physicist who was active primarily in the fields of aeronautics and astronautics. He is responsible for many key advances in aerodynamics, notably his work on supersonic and hypersonic airflow characterization...

    , 1946, Hungarian-born U.S. aeronautical engineer
  • Martin Karplus
    Martin Karplus
    Martin Karplus is an Austrian-born American theoretical chemist. He has been Theodore William Richards Professor of Chemistry at Harvard University since 1979...

    , Austrian-born American theoretical chemist, pioneer of molecular dynamics of biological molecules.
  • Ephraim Katzir
    Ephraim Katzir
    Ephraim Katzir was an Israeli biophysicist and former Israeli Labor Party politician. He was the fourth President of Israel from 1973 until 1978.-Biography:...

    , 1977, Ukrainian-born Israeli chemist, fourth President of Israel
    Israel
    The State of Israel is a parliamentary republic located in the Middle East, along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea...

  • Joseph Keller
    Joseph Keller
    Joseph B. Keller is an American mathematician who specializes in applied mathematics. He is best known for his work on the "Geometrical Theory of Diffraction" ....

    , 1986, U.S. mathematician
  • Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov
    Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov
    Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov is a leading Soviet physicist, well known for his role in developing the BKL conjecture in general relativity.Khalatnikov was born in Dnipropetrovsk and graduated from Dnipropetrovsk State University with a degree in Physics in 1941. He has been a member of the...

    , 1994, Russian physicist
  • Motoo Kimura
    Motoo Kimura
    was a Japanese biologist best known for introducing the neutral theory of molecular evolution in 1968. He became one of the most influential theoretical population geneticists. He is remembered in genetics for his innovative use of diffusion equations to calculate the probability of fixation of...

    , 1993, Japanese biologist, evolutionary geneticist
  • Marc Kirschner
    Marc Kirschner
    Professor Marc W. Kirschner is an American cell biologist.- Biography :Kirschner graduated from Northwestern University in 1966 and in 1971 received his doctorate from the University of California, Berkeley. He held post-doc positions at Berkeley and at the University of Oxford in England. He...

    , 1999, U.S. cell biologist
  • Walter Kohn
    Walter Kohn
    Walter Kohn is an Austrian-born American theoretical physicist.He was awarded, with John Pople, the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1998. The award recognized their contributions to the understandings of the electronic properties of materials...

    , 1998, Austrian-born U.S. chemist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1998)
  • Arthur Kornberg
    Arthur Kornberg
    Arthur Kornberg was an American biochemist who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1959 for his discovery of "the mechanisms in the biological synthesis of deoxyribonucleic acid " together with Dr. Severo Ochoa of New York University...

    , 1970, U.S. chemist, Nobel Prize for Medicine (1959)
  • Martin Kruskal
    Martin Kruskal
    Martin David Kruskal was an American mathematician and physicist. He made fundamental contributions in many areas of mathematics and science, ranging from plasma physics to general relativity and from nonlinear analysis to asymptotic analysis...

    , 1997, U.S. physicist

L

  • Edwin Land, 1986, U.S. inventor
  • Lev Landau
    Lev Landau
    Lev Davidovich Landau was a prominent Soviet physicist who made fundamental contributions to many areas of theoretical physics...

    , 1960, Azebarjan-born Russian physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1962)
  • Karl Landsteiner
    Karl Landsteiner
    Karl Landsteiner , was an Austrian-born American biologist and physician of Jewish origin. He is noted for having first distinguished the main blood groups in 1900, having developed the modern system of classification of blood groups from his identification of the presence of agglutinins in the...

    , 1941, Austrian-born U.S. biologist, Nobel Prize (1930)
  • Joshua Lederberg
    Joshua Lederberg
    Joshua Lederberg ForMemRS was an American molecular biologist known for his work in microbial genetics, artificial intelligence, and the United States space program. He was just 33 years old when he won the 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering that bacteria can mate and...

    , 1979, U.S. scientist medicine, Nobel Prize (1958)
  • Solomon Lefschetz
    Solomon Lefschetz
    Solomon Lefschetz was an American mathematician who did fundamental work on algebraic topology, its applications to algebraic geometry, and the theory of non-linear ordinary differential equations.-Life:...

    , 1961, Russian-born U.S. mathematician, topology
  • Tullio Levi-Civita
    Tullio Levi-Civita
    Tullio Levi-Civita, FRS was an Italian mathematician, most famous for his work on absolute differential calculus and its applications to the theory of relativity, but who also made significant contributions in other areas. He was a pupil of Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro, the inventor of tensor calculus...

    , 1930, Italian mathematician
  • Rita Levi-Montalcini
    Rita Levi-Montalcini
    Rita Levi-Montalcini , Knight Grand Cross is an Italian neurologist who, together with colleague Stanley Cohen, received the 1986 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discovery of nerve growth factor...

    , 1995, Italian-born U.S. scientist, Nobel Prize for Medicine (1986)
  • Evgeny Lifshitz
    Evgeny Lifshitz
    Evgeny Mikhailovich Lifshitz was a leading Soviet physicist of Jewish origin and the brother of physicist Ilya Mikhailovich Lifshitz. Lifshitz is well known in general relativity for coauthoring the BKL conjecture concerning the nature of a generic curvature...

    , 1982, Russian physicist and astronomer
  • Fritz Lipmann, 1962, German-born U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize (1962)
  • Gabriel Lippmann
    Gabriel Lippmann
    Jonas Ferdinand Gabriel Lippmann was a Franco-Luxembourgish physicist and inventor, and Nobel laureate in physics for his method of reproducing colours photographically based on the phenomenon of interference....

    , 1896, Luxembourg-born French physicist, Nobel Prize (1908)
  • Otto Loewi
    Otto Loewi
    Otto Loewi was a German born pharmacologist whose discovery of acetylcholine helped enhance medical therapy. The discovery earned for him the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1936 which he shared with Sir Henry Dale, whom he met in 1902 when spending some months in Ernest Starling's...

    , 1954, German-born U.S. biochemist and pharmacologist, Nobel Prize (1936)
  • Andre Lwoff, 1958, French scientist, Nobel Prize (1965)

M

  • David H. MacLennan, Canadian-born biochemist
  • Rudolph Marcus, 1987, Canadian-born U.S. chemist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1992)
  • Lise Meitner
    Lise Meitner
    Lise Meitner FRS was an Austrian-born, later Swedish, physicist who worked on radioactivity and nuclear physics. Meitner was part of the team that discovered nuclear fission, an achievement for which her colleague Otto Hahn was awarded the Nobel Prize...

    , 1955, Austrian-born Swedish physicist nuclear fission
  • Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov
    Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov
    Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov was a Russian biologist, zoologist and protozoologist, best remembered for his pioneering research into the immune system. Mechnikov received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1908, shared with Paul Ehrlich, for his work on phagocytosis...

    , als called Elie Metchnikoff, 1895, Ukrainian-born Russian French scientist, Nobel Prize for Medicine (1908)
  • Otto Meyerhof, 1937, German-born U.S. scientist, Nobel Prize (1922)
  • Elliot Meyerowitz
    Elliot Meyerowitz
    Elliot Meyerowitz is an American biologist.He is George W. Beadle Professor of Biology, Division of Biology at the California Institute of Technology, he served as Chair of the Biology Division from 2000 to 2010....

    , 2004, U.S. plant biologist
  • Albert Michelson, 1902, Polish-born U.S. physicist, Nobel Prize (1907)
  • Henri Moissan
    Henri Moissan
    Ferdinand Frederick Henri Moissan was a French chemist who won the 1906 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in isolating fluorine from its compounds.-Biography:...

    , 1905, French chemist, artificial diamonds, Nobel Prize (1906)
  • Hermann Joseph Muller
    Hermann Joseph Muller
    Hermann Joseph Muller was an American geneticist, educator, and Nobel laureate best known for his work on the physiological and genetic effects of radiation as well as his outspoken political beliefs...

  • Walter Munk
    Walter Munk
    Walter Heinrich Munk is an American physical oceanographer. He is professor of geophysics emeritus and holds the Secretary of the Navy/Chief of Naval Operations Oceanography Chair at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California.-Early life:Born in 1917 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary,...

    , 1976, Austrian-born U.S. geophysicist

O

  • George Olah, 1997, Hungarian-born U.S. chemist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1994)
  • J. Robert Oppenheimer, U.S. Physicist

P

  • Wolfgang Pauli
    Wolfgang Pauli
    Wolfgang Ernst Pauli was an Austrian theoretical physicist and one of the pioneers of quantum physics. In 1945, after being nominated by Albert Einstein, he received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his "decisive contribution through his discovery of a new law of Nature, the exclusion principle or...

    , 1953, Austrian-born U.S. Swedish physicist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     (1945)
  • Alexander Pines
    Alexander Pines
    Alexander Pines is the Glenn T. Seaborg Professor of Chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley, Senior Scientist in the Materials Sciences Division of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory , and a member of the California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences and the Department of...

    , 2002, chemist, magnetic resonance imaging, nuclear magnetic resonance
  • Frank Press
    Frank Press
    Frank Press is an American geophysicist.Born in Brooklyn, New York, Press was science advisor to President Jimmy Carter from1976 to 1980,and president of the U.S. NationalAcademy of Sciences from 1981 to 1993...

    , 1985, U.S. geophysicist, President of United States National Academy of Sciences (1981–1993)
  • Stanley Prusiner, 1997, U.S. scientist, Nobel Prize for Medicine (1997)

R

  • Tadeus Reichstein
    Tadeus Reichstein
    Tadeusz Reichstein was a Polish-born Swiss chemist and Nobel laureate.Reichstein was born into a Jewish family at Włocławek, Congress Poland, and spent his early childhood at Kiev, where his father was an engineer...

    , 1952, Polish-born Switzerland chemist, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
    The Nobel Prizes are annual international awards bestowed by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895...

     for Medicine (1950)

S

  • Julius von Sachs
    Julius von Sachs
    Julius von Sachs was a German botanist from Breslau, Prussian Silesia.At an early age he showed a taste for natural history, becoming acquainted with the Breslau physiologist Jan Evangelista Purkyně. In 1851 he began studying at Charles University in Prague...

    , 1888, German founder of experimental plant physiology
  • Edwin Salpeter, 1993, Austrian-born Australian U.S. astronomer
  • Martin Schwarzschild
    Martin Schwarzschild
    Martin Schwarzschild was a German American astronomer. He was the son of famed astrophysicist Karl Schwarzschild and the nephew of the Swiss astrophysicist Robert Emden.-Biography:...

    , 1996, German-born U.S. astronomer
  • Gilbert Stork
    Gilbert Stork
    Gilbert Stork is a U.S. organic chemist. He is the Eugene Higgins Professor of Chemistry Emeritus at Columbia University. The Stork enamine synthesis is named in his honor.-Education:...

    , 1999, Belgian-born U.S. organic chemist
  • Satyam Vergish, 2011, Plant Molecular Biologist - India

T

  • Valentine Telegdi
    Valentine Telegdi
    Valentine Louis Telegdi FRS was a Hungarian-born U.S. physicist.He was the Enrico Fermi Distinguished Service Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago before he moved to ETH Zürich...

    , 2003, Hungarian-born Switzerland U.S. physicist
  • Howard Temin, 1988, U.S. scientist, retroviruses, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize
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     (1975)

V

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    Johann Weichard Freiherr von Valvasor or simply Valvasor was a Slovenian nobleman, scientist and polymath, and a fellow of the Royal Society in London.-Biography:...

    , 1687, Slovenian polymath
  • Harold E. Varmus
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    Nobel Prize
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     for Medicine (1989)

W

  • Otto Warburg
    Otto Heinrich Warburg
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    , 1934, German chemist, Nobel Prize for Medicine (1931)
  • André Weil
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  • Steven Weinberg
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Z

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