Lieselotte Templeton
Lilo Templeton | |
|---|---|
| Born | Lieselotte Kamm 4 August 1918 |
| Died | 10 October 2009 (aged 91) |
| Citizenship | Germany, United States |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 2 |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley |
| Thesis | The heats of formation of CN, N2 and NO (1950) |
| Doctoral advisor | Leo Brewer |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Chemist |
| Sub-discipline | |
| Institutions | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory University of California, Berkeley |
Lieselotte "Lilo" Templeton (née Kamm, 4 August 1918 in Breslau – 10 October 2009 in Berkeley, California) was a German-born American crystallographer.[1][2][3][4][5] She received the Patterson Award of the American Crystallographic Association together with her husband David H. Templeton in 1987.[6]
Life
[edit | edit source]Templeton was the daughter of Berta Kamm (née Stern) and Walter Kamm, and the niece of Otto Stern.[2][7] She grew up in Germany in a secular Jewish family.[5] They fled from Nazi Germany to France in 1933 and emigrated to the US in 1936.[5] She received her bachelor's degree and her PhD from University of California, Berkeley in 1946 and 1950, respectively.[5] Glenn T. Seaborg was part of the committee for the qualifying examination of her PhD.[8] Her PhD thesis, written under the supervision of Leo Brewer, was named: "The heats of formation of CN, N2 and NO".[5][9] She was briefly associated with[5] the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and later worked as a research scientist for the University of California, Berkeley.[1] In 1948, she married David H. Templeton[7] and had two children with him.[7] Due to anti-nepotism rules, she was sometimes not allowed to work in the same department as her husband.[5]
Research
[edit | edit source]After her PhD, she worked on solid-state chemistry, ceramics, and the detection of explosives.[5] Her research in crystallography started with her work on the analytical absorption program (AGNOST), later called ABSOR.[10] This program helped solving several crystal structures of heavy-element compounds and was also important for her studies on anomalous dispersion with synchrotron radiation on absorption edges which she performed jointly with David H. Templeton.[10] This led to the development of the multi-wavelength anomalous diffraction phasing, now a standard method for protein structure analysis.[7]
Together with David H. Templeton, she also used the polarized nature of synchrotron radiation to show X-ray dichroism in anisotropic molecules and to measure the polarized anomalous scattering in diffraction experiments for the first time.[10]
Selected publications
[edit | edit source]Three of her most important publications on anamalous dispersion of absorption edges with synchrotron radiation:
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Two of her publications on X-ray dichroism in anisotropic molecules:
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Awards
[edit | edit source]She received the Patterson Award of the American Crystallographic Association jointly with her husband David H. Templeton in 1987 for their discoveries regarding use, measurement, and analysis of anomalous X-ray scattering.[1][6]
Lieselotte Templeton Prize for Students
[edit | edit source]The German Society for Crystallography (DGK) awards the Lieselotte Templeton Prize to students who have written an excellent Bachelor's or Master's thesis in the field of crystallography.[11]
References
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