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Examples
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Sadly, perhaps the most apt analogy might be the one given to me by Richard Smalley, the now-deceased Nobel Prize winner, during an interview in 2004.
Michael Kanellos: Sputnik? New Frontier? Where Is the Historical Analogy for Green? Michael Kanellos 2011
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There was a lot of early work by Japan's Endo and also Richard Smalley.
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If you haven't looked at what Richard Smalley is saying, I suggest doing so.
Our Vast Oil Reserves, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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Shortly before his untimely death in 2005, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Smalley coined this the "Terawatt Challenge": increasing global energy production from roughly 15 terawatts in 2005 to 60 terawatts annually by 2100 in a way that simultaneously confronts the challenges of global warming, poverty alleviation, and resource depletion.
Teryn Norris: Want to Save the World? Make Clean Energy Cheap. 2009
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Eric Drexler, and the late Richard Smalley, Novel Laureate for the discovery of Buckminsterfullerene, stating that if one discounts the possibility of Chinese supernanoweapons, What would be the danger?
Archive 2008-01-01 2008
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Eric Drexler, and the late Richard Smalley, Novel Laureate for the discovery of Buckminsterfullerene, stating that if one discounts the possibility of Chinese supernanoweapons, What would be the danger?
Coming Attractions in "China Threat" Theories: The Nano Gap 2008
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Buckminister Fuller and Richard Smalley in terms of allotrope.
The Lopsided Universe Sean 2008
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In 1985, researchers led by chemist Richard Smalley of Rice University serendipitously discovered a strange molecule, made of 60 atoms of carbon, shaped exactly like a geodesic dome.
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Richard Smalley conceived of the Terrawatt Challenge (pdf) (see also).
A. Siegel: The Progressive Crises: Global Warming and Peak Oil 2008
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The late Nobel laureate Richard Smalley predicted that by 2010, 90 percent of all scientists and engineers holding Ph.D. s would be living in Asia.
Asia's New Gods 2007
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