Who discovered proton rutherford or goldstein

David S. Goldstein, M.D., Ph.D.

1.  Goldstein DS (2025)

An Autonomic Life(pdf, 14938 KB)


2.  Goldstein DS (2024)

Autonomic Medicine for Students(pdf, 5491 KB) 


3.  Goldstein DS, Holmes C, Sullivan P, Lopez G, Gelsomino J, Moore S, Isonaka R, Wu T, Sharabi Y (2023)

Cardiac noradrenergic deficiency revealed by 18F-dopamine positron emission tomography identifies preclinical central Lewy body diseases.

J Clin Invest 2023;Oct 26:e172460. doi: 10.1172/JCI172460. (PMID 37883190)


4.  Goldstein DS (2022)

Principles of Autonomic Medicine(pdf, 27046 KB)


5.  Goldstein DS (2019)

How does homeostasis happen? Integrative physiologic, systems biologic, and evolutionary perspectives

Am J Physiol (Regul Integr Comp Physiol), 316, R301-R317.(PMID 28918243)


6.  Goldstein DS, Pekker M, Eisenhofer G, Sharabi Y. (2019)

Computational modeling reveals multiple abnormalities of myocardial noradrenergic function in Lewy body diseases

JCI Insight , doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.130441, (PMID 31335324)


7.  Isonaka R, Rosenberg AZ, Sul

Joseph L. Goldstein

American biochemist

For other people named Joseph Goldstein, see Joseph Goldstein (disambiguation).

Joseph Leonard GoldsteinForMemRS (born April 18, 1940) is an American biochemist. He received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1985, along with fellow University of Texas Southwestern researcher, Michael Brown, for their studies regarding cholesterol.[2] They discovered that human cells have low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors that remove cholesterol from the blood and that when LDL receptors are not present in sufficient numbers, individuals develop hypercholesterolemia and become at risk for cholesterol related diseases, notably coronary heart disease.[3] Their studies led to the development of statin drugs.[2]

Life and career

Goldstein was born in Kingstree, South Carolina, the son of Fannie (Alpert) and Isadore E. Goldstein, who owned a clothing store. His family is Jewish.[4] Goldstein received his BSci from Washington and Lee University in 1962, and his MD from the University of Texas

Eugen Goldstein

German physicist

Eugen Goldstein (OY-gən, German:[ˈɔʏɡeːnˈɡɔlt.ʃtaɪn,ˈɔʏɡn̩-]; 5 September 1850 – 25 December 1930) was a German physicist. He was an early investigator of discharge tubes, the discoverer of anode rays or canal rays, later identified as positive ions in the gas phase including the hydrogen ion.[1][2] He was the great uncle of the violinists Mikhail Goldstein and Boris Goldstein.

Life

Goldstein was born in 1850 at Gleiwitz Upper Silesia, now known as Gliwice, Poland, to a Jewish family. He studied at Breslau and later, under Helmholtz, in Berlin. Goldstein worked at the Berlin Observatory from 1878 to 1890 but spent most of his career at the Potsdam Observatory, where he became head of the astrophysical section in 1927. He died in 1930 and was buried in the Weißensee Cemetery in Berlin.

Work

In the mid-nineteenth century, Julius Plücker investigated the light emitted in discharge tubes (Crookes tubes) and the influence of magnetic fields on the glow. Later, in 1869, Johann Wilhelm Hittor

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