Ann T. Nelms

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Ann T. Nelms
Born1929
NationalityAmerican
Scientific career
FieldsNuclear physics
InstitutionsNational Bureau of Standards

Ann T. Nelms (born 1929) is a prominent African American nuclear physicist. Her research, which involved the study of the persistence of nuclear radioactivity, was cited in reports on nuclear fallout and human health.

Life and career[edit]

Nelms was born in 1929[1][2] in Waycross, Georgia.[3]

She worked as a nuclear physicist for National Bureau of Standards in the 1950s.[3] She collaborated in her nuclear research with Ugo Fano, an Italian-born academician who joined the National Bureau of Standards as the bureau's first theoretical physicist after a stint at Aberdeen Proving Grounds. She also collaborated with J W Cooper, a senior research fellow with the National Bureau of Standards.[4]

As of January 1954, she lived in the Washington, D.C., area with her husband and one-year-old child.[3]

Publications[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "In Black and White: A Guide to Magazine Articles, Newspaper Articles, and Books Concerning Black Individuals and Groups", Third Edition, edited by Mary Mace Spradling, 1980, Gale Research, Detroit
  2. ^ Blacks in Science and Medicine, by Vivian Ovelton Sammons, 1990, Hemisphere Publishing, New York
  3. ^ a b c "Hurray for Waycross, Ga", Pittsburgh Courier, January 9, 1954
  4. ^ Abstract 40.441, Reviews of Modern Physics, 1968
  5. ^ Biennial Report of the National Bureau of Standards, 1953-1954
  6. ^ Annual Report of the National Bureau of Standards, 1957