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  1. Andrew Fielding Huxley (né le 22 novembre 1917 à Hampstead, dans la banlieue de Londres, et mort le 30 mai 2012 à Cambridge 1) est un biophysicien et physiologiste britannique, lauréat en 1963 avec John Carew Eccles et Alan Lloyd Hodgkin du prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine pour son rôle dans la découverte des mécanismes ...

  2. Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley OM FRS HonFREng (22 November 1917 – 30 May 2012) was an English physiologist and biophysicist. He was born into the prominent Huxley family. After leaving Westminster School in central London, he went to Trinity College, Cambridge, on a scholarship, after which he joined Alan Hodgkin to study nerve impulses.

  3. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1963 was awarded jointly to Sir John Carew Eccles, Alan Lloyd Hodgkin and Andrew Fielding Huxley "for their discoveries concerning the ionic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition in the peripheral and central portions of the nerve cell membrane"

  4. 16 juin 2021 · Huxley is best known for his work on non-conventional superconductivty and in particular the formation of superconductivity in ferromagnets. He was awarded a Royal Society Wolfson Merit award in 2006. He was a research scientist at CEA-Grenoble France from 1994-2006 and was appointed to the Chair of Physics at Edinburgh in 2006.

    • a.huxley [at] ed.ac.uk
    • Professor
  5. Andrew Fielding Huxley. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1963. Born: 22 November 1917, Hampstead, United Kingdom. Died: 30 May 2012, Grantchester, United Kingdom. Affiliation at the time of the award: University College, London, United Kingdom.

  6. 5 juin 2012 · Sir Andrew Huxley, a British scientist from an illustrious family whose boyhood mechanical skills led to a career in physiology — “the mechanical engineering of living things,” he called it — and...

  7. Andrew Fielding Huxley est un biophysicien et physiologiste britannique, lauréat en 1963 avec John Carew Eccles et Alan Lloyd Hodgkin du prix Nobel de physiologie ou médecine pour son rôle dans la découverte des mécanismes ioniques de la transmission nerveuse.