Davy Medal

chemistry award given by the Royal Society From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Davy Medal
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The Davy Medal is given by the Royal Society of London "for an outstandingly important recent discovery in any branch of chemistry".[1][2] The medal is named after Humphry Davy. The medal is given with money. The amount you would be given was £1000 but it is now £2000.[3]

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Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff, the first people who were given the award. They were given the medal "for their researches & discoveries in spectrum analysis".
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History

The medal was first given in 1877 to Robert Wilhelm Bunsen and Gustav Robert Kirchhoff "for their researches & discoveries in spectrum analysis",[1] and has since been given 140 times.[1] The medal is given yearly and, unlike other Royal Society medals (such as the Hughes), has always been given every year without a break.

On 1882, it was given to Dmitri Mendeleev and Julius Lothar Meyer "for their discovery of the periodic relations of the atomic weights".[4]

The 2020 award was to Ben G. Davis for "inventing powerful chemical methods that... manipulate complex biological molecules" (etc).

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List of recipients

Source: Royal Society

More information Year, Name ...
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References

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