var s_account="msnportalencartaau"; ninemsn Home Hotmail My ninemsn Sign in ... More Additional Reference Thesaurus Bilingual Dictionaries Sidebar Primary Resources Homework Resources Foreign Language Help Times Archive Literature Guides ... Project Starters Support Encarta Products Encarta Answers Encarta Worldwide Help Related Items Eccles, Sir John Carew more... Encarta Search Search Encarta about Hodgkin, Sir Alan Lloyd Hodgkin, Sir Alan Lloyd Encyclopedia Article Find in this article View printer-friendly page E-mail Multimedia 1 item Hodgkin, Sir Alan Lloyd (1914-1998), British biophysicist and Nobel laureate, born in Danbury, Essex, and educated at the University of Cambridge. From 1939 to 1945 he worked on radar development for the Air Ministry. He returned to Cambridge, first as a lecturer, then as assistant research director, and in 1952 was made Research Professor of the Royal Society. Hodgkin shared the 1963 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with his colleague, the British physiologist Andrew F. Huxley, and the Australian physiologist Sir John C. Eccles. Hodgkin and Huxley were cited for their formulation of the mathematical equations expressing the electrical events accompanying the discharge of a single nerve cell. Find in this article View printer-friendly page E-mail How to cite this article: "Hodgkin, Sir Alan Lloyd," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2007 | |
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