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Franklin Photograph 51

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Photo 51 - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photo_51#:~:text=Photo%2051.%20Photograph%2051%20is%20the%20nickname%20given,King%27s%20College%20London%20in%20Sir%20John%20Randall%27s%20group.
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Photograph 51, by Rosalind Franklin (1952) | The Embryo …

    https://embryo.asu.edu/pages/photograph-51-rosalind-franklin-1952
    On 6 May 1952, at King´s College London in London, England, Rosalind Franklin photographed her fifty-first X-ray diffraction pattern of deoxyribosenucleic acid, or DNA. Photograph 51, or Photo 51, revealed information about DNA´s three-dimensional structure by displaying the way a beam of X-rays scattered off a pure fiber of DNA.

Photograph 51 · Rosalind Franklin University

    https://www.rosalindfranklin.edu/symposiums/wish/gender-bias/photograph-51/
    Photograph 51 A Staged Reading Produced by The Theatre School of DePaul University Photograph 51 tells the dramatic tale of the race to the double helix in the years between 1951 and 1953, when Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins were using X …

Photo 51 - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photo_51
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Rosalind Franklin Character Analysis in Photograph 51

    https://www.litcharts.com/lit/photograph-51/characters/rosalind-franklin
    The protagonist and central figure of Photograph 51, Rosalind Franklin is a brilliant Jewish British scientist in her mid-30s who has returned to England after several years abroad in Paris to work in the X-ray crystallography lab at King’s College London. Rosalind receives a rude awakening upon arriving, however.

How 'Photo 51' Changed the World | Live Science

    https://www.livescience.com/2912-photo-51-changed-world.html
    Captured by English chemist Rosalind Franklin in 1952, Photo 51 is a fuzzy X -ray depicting a strand of DNA extracted from human calf tissue — …

How Rosalind Franklin’s “Photo 51” Told Us the Truth …

    https://hyperallergic.com/167022/how-rosalind-franklins-photo-51-told-us-the-truth-about-ourselves/
    The iconic X-ray diffraction photograph of DNA taken by physical chemist Rosalind Elsie Franklin (1920–1958) might seem timed to the season. Auld lang syne, and all that. The genetic material...

Rosalind Franklin and Photograph 51 - The Lancet

    https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(15)00422-5/fulltext
    Anna Ziegler's new play, Photograph 51, tells the story of how this image led to the discovery of the structure of DNA, and of the tangled web of interactions between the scientists involved. Franklin's relationship with Wilkins was famously fractious. It was not merely a personality clash—at issue was who directed the DNA research.

Photograph 51 by Anna Ziegler Plot Summary | LitCharts

    https://www.litcharts.com/lit/photograph-51/summary
    Photograph 51 Rosalind Franklin and several of her colleagues and rivals step forward onto the stage to deliver, in a mix of choral address and rapidly shifting scene-setting, the story of the “race” to discover the structure of DNA in 1950s London.

Photograph 51 - Anna Ziegler

    https://annabziegler.net/featured-plays/photograph-51/
    Photograph 51 neatly coils a scientific detective story around a rumination on how sexism, personality and morality can impact collaboration and creativity…It honors Franklin by painting her as a complete person, with flaws and sterling attributes, and by evoking the thrills and risks of scientific pursuit itself.” — The Seattle Times

What am I looking at in Franklin's Photo 51 of DNA?

    https://biology.stackexchange.com/questions/58916/what-am-i-looking-at-in-franklins-photo-51-of-dna
    46 Here's Rosalind Franklin's famous Photo 51, the X-ray diffraction image of DNA from which Watson and Crick deduced its structure: My understanding is that it depicts a short segment of DNA shown from the side (so the axis that the strands wind around would run up and down through the center of the photo).

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