Advertisement

Advertisement

Heyrovský

[ hey-rawf-skee ]

noun

  1. Ja·ro·slav [yah, -, r, aw-slahf], 1890–1967, Czech chemist: Nobel Prize 1959.


Discover More

Example Sentences

“He’s going to lead people? Oh my goodness,” says Vladimíra Petráková, a biophysicist and group leader at CAS’s J. Heyrovsky Institute of Physical Chemistry.

Scientists have been able to make these RNA bases other ways, using chemical mixes and pressure, but this is the first experiment to test the theory that the energy from a space crash could trigger the crucial chemical reaction, said lead author Svatopluk Civis of the Heyrovsky Institute of Physical Chemistry in Prague.

Scientists have been able to make these RNA bases other ways, using chemical mixes and pressure, but this is the first experiment to test the theory that the energy from a space crash could trigger the crucial chemical reaction, said lead author Svatopluk Civis of the Heyrovsky Institute of Physical Chemistry in Prague.

Scientists have been able to make these RNA bases other ways, using chemical mixes and pressure, but this is the first experiment to test the theory that the energy from a space crash could trigger the crucial chemical reaction, said lead author Svatopluk Civis of the Heyrovsky Institute of Physical Chemistry in Prague.

Scientists have been able to make these RNA bases other ways, using chemical mixes and pressure, but this is the first experiment to test the theory that the energy from a space crash could trigger the crucial chemical reaction, said lead author Svatopluk Civis of the Heyrovsky Institute of Physical Chemistry in Prague.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


Heymanshey rube