Martin Medal

The Martin Medal is an award given for outstanding contributions to the advancement of separation science.[1] The award is presented by The Chromatographic Society, a UK based organization promoting all aspects of chromatography and related separation techniques.[2] The award is named after Professor Archer. J.P Martin, who contributed to the invention of partition chromatography, and shared the 1952 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[3]

Award winners

Past winners of the Martin Medal are:[4]

  • Robert Kennedy (2019)
  • Jean-Luc Veuthey (2018)
  • Andreas Manz (2017)
  • Ian Wilson & Peter Myers (2016)
  • Pavel Jandera (2015)
  • Nobuo Tanaka (2014)
  • Günther Bonn & Frantisek Svec (2013)
  • Edward S. Yeung (2012)
  • Peter J. Schoenmakers (2011)
  • Peter Carr (2010)
  • Wolfgang F. Lindner (2009)
  • Ron Majors & Johan Roeraade (2007)
  • Jim Waters (2006)
  • Vadim A. Davankov (2005)
  • Terry Berger (2004)
  • Jack Henion (2003)
  • Paul R. Haddad & Werner Engewald (2002)
  • John Michael Ramsey (2001)
  • Klaus Mosbach & William S. Hancock (2000)
  • Hans Poppe & Geoffrey Eglinton, FRS (1999)
  • Albert Zlatkis (1998, awarded posthumously)
  • Will Jennings & Joseph Jack Kirkland (1997)
  • Milton L. Lee (1996)
  • Milos Novotny & Shigeru Terabe (1995)
  • Pat Sandra & Csaba Horvath (1994)
  • Hans Engelhardt, Fred E. Regnier, & Klaus K. Unger (1993)
  • Irving Wainer & James W. Jorgenson (1992)
  • Dai E. Games, Barry L. Karger, Daniel W. Armstrong, & Dennis H. Desty (1991)
  • Egil Jellum, William Pirkle, & Carl A. Cramers (1990)
  • Jon Calvin Giddings, Udo. A Th Brinkman, J. F. K. Huber, Rudolf E. Kaiser, & Lloyd R. Snyder (1986)
  • Ervin Kovats & John Knox (1985)
  • C. E. Roland Jones & Arnaldo L. Liberti (1984)
  • Gerhard Schomburg & Ralph Stock (1983)
  • Edward R. Adlard, Leslie S. Ettre, Courtney S. G. Phillips, & Raymond P. W. Scott (1982)
  • G. A. Peter Tuey & Georges Guiochon (1980)
  • Ernst Bayer & C. E. H. Knapman (1978)


gollark: I'm sure Google has lots of spare GPU/TPU power. They have some ridiculous GPT-3-scale image/text model in development now, and use BERT-like entities for search parsing.
gollark: I'd think that it would be possible to detect it if you had a lot of samples of it versus real human text. And there was this demo highlighting differences between human and GPTous text, via highlighting low-probability-from-the-model words (which are often also the most important).
gollark: I wonder if Google/search engines generally can detect GPT-3ous content yet.
gollark: That sounds hard, actually.
gollark: What if we generate VAST quantities of novel and interesting content?

References

  1. "Martin Medal". ChromSoc.
  2. "About". ChromSoc.
  3. "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1952". NobelPrize.org.
  4. "List of The Chromatographic Society Medal Winners" (PDF). ChromSoc. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
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