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Haitinger Prize
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Haitinger Prize

The Haitinger Prize of the Austrian Academy of Sciences was founded in 1904 by the chemist and factory director, Ludwig Camillo Haitinger (1860–1945), who created the award in honor of his father,[1] Karl Ludwig Haitinger. From 1905 to 1943 it was awarded every year,[2] for "studies in chemistry and physics that proved to be of great practical use for industrial applications".[3] The prize was awarded for the last time in the year 1954.[citation needed]

Winners

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Rudolf Scheuble for candles which burn in color[6]
F. Wenzel[5]
Wilhelm Schmidt[5] for research on microclimatology[11]
Otto Hönigschmid for measurement of atomic mass[13]
Julius Zellner[5]
Hans Thirring[5] for studies on general relativity[18]
Anton Kailan for research on radium and ultraviolet radiation[21]
Gerhard Kirsch for research on nuclear physics and geologic time measurement[24]
Ludwig Moser for quantitative rules for metals[26]
J. Lindner for organic chemistry[5]
L. Schmid for organic chemistry[5]
Berta Karlik[28] for her work on luminescence[29]

See also

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References

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Sources

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