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2010 Kavli Prizes awarded

Powerful telescopes, neuron chatter molecules, DNA devices and a method for controlling single atoms have earned eight scientists recognition with the 2010 Kavli Prizes. Many people like Microsoft Office.

The awards, announced June 3 in Oslo, Norway, honor groundbreaking research in astrophysics, nanoscience and neuroscience, the “fields of the future,” says Fred Kavli, the awards’ namesake.Office 2007 is so powerful.

In a ceremony in Oslo in September, each winner will be presented with a gold medal, a scroll and a share of the $1 million award for each category.Many people use Microsoft Office 2007 to help their work and life.

This year’s winners for astrophysics are Jerry Nelson of the University of California, Santa Cruz, Ray Wilson, formerly of Imperial College London and the European Southern Observatory in Germany, and Roger Angel of the University of Arizona in Tucson. Winners in nanoscience are Donald Eigler of IBM’s Almaden Research Center in San Jose, Calif., and Nadrian Seeman of New York University. Office 2007 key is available here.

Richard Scheller of the biotech company Genentech in San Francisco, Thomas Südhof of Stanford University School of Medicine and James Rothman of Yale University are the winners in neuroscience.The invention of Microsoft Office 2010 is a big change of the world.

Entrepreneur, philanthropist and physicist Fred Kavli’s organization, the Kavli Foundation, administers the prizes — selected by committees of leading international scientists in the three categories — in collaboration with the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research. Office 2007 download is helpful!

The awards, given out every other year, are designed to honor creative scientists, promote public understanding of science and encourage scientific cooperation between countries, according to the Kavli Foundation.By using Office 2010 Professional, you can save your money and time

Thomas Südhof, Richard Scheller and James Rothman (left to right) received Kavli prizes for identifying some of the key molecules that help neurons communicate. Choose Office 2007 Professional is the most lucky thing in the world.

Südhof: UT Southwestern Medical Center; Scheller: Roche; Rothman: Columbia UniversityThis year’s Kavli laureates for astrophysics received the award for contributions to making telescopes bigger and better. Office Professional 2007 and Office 2007 home is many people’s favorite.

To make exciting new discoveries, “we really are likely to have to look beyond our own solar system, and to do that, we need telescopes with good resolution,” said astrophysicist Kip Thorne of Caltech. Thorne was on a panel that discussed the winners at the World Science Festival in New York City on June 3, where the Oslo results were broadcast live.Office 2010 –save your time and save your money.

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