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Os ganhadores do prêmio Nobel em 2019 e sua contribuição para o mundo
Alfred Nobel foi um importante químico sueco que inventou a dinamite e a borracha sintética. Mas há também um outro motivo para seu sobrenome ser mundialmente conhecido: foi a partir de um desejo manifestado em seu testamento que se criou o Prêmio Nobel.
O objetivo da premiação é homenagear pessoas que contribuíram para o desenvolvimento da humanidade em diferentes áreas, Química, Física, Medicina, Literatura e Paz Mundial. Entre 1901, quando foi instituído, e 2018, 936 pessoas ou instituições foram laureadas nessas categorias — e também na área de Economia, criada posteriormente pelo Banco Central da Suécia. Este ano, mais oito pessoas notáveis entram nesta lista. Descubra quem são e veja por que suas obras são importantes.
John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham e Akira Yoshino – Nobel de Química

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O Nobel de Química de 2019 foi para um trio de três nacionalidades: o americano John B. Goodenough, o britânico-americano M. Stanley Whittingham e o japonês Akira Yoshino. os três cientistas não trabalham juntos, mas todos contribuíram para o surgimento das baterias de íons de lítio, usadas hoje em celulares, notebooks e até em carros elétricos.
Embora Akira Yoshino tenha sido quem desenvolveu a versão “final” das baterias de lítio, ele precisou das contribuições de Whittingham e Goodenough. Whittingham foi quem primeiro fez uso do lítio metálico, mas o material ainda era muito reativo e poderia causar explosões. Cerca de uma década depois, Goodenough introduziu o uso de óxido de cobalto intercalado aos íons de lítio, para criar baterias mais potentes. Finalmente, Yoshino reuniu todas essas descobertas e criou a primeira bateria de íons de lítio comercialmente viável, em 1985.
James Peebles, Michel Mayor e Didier Queloz – Nobel de Física

<span class="hidden">–</span>Reprodução
Já os vencedores do Nobel de Física não foram premiados todos pela mesma pesquisa. James Peebles é um dos responsáveis por uma descoberta de quase 50 anos atrás que foi essencial para compreender o surgimento e evolução do Universo. Peebles previu a existência de uma radiação que foi confirmada como uma espécie de “eco” do Big Bang.
Michel Mayor e Didier Queloz, por sua vez, foram responsáveis pela descoberta do primeiro planeta fora do Sistema Solar, batizado de 51 Pegasi B, a 50 anos-luz da Terra. O feito só foi possível graças à técnica chamada Espectroscopia Doppler, que mede pequenas oscilações em estrelas. Essas oscilações são provocadas por planetas que oscilam em torno dessas estrelas. Hoje, 24 anos após a descoberta da dupla de físicos, já foram descobertos mais de 4 mil planetas.
William G. Kaelin Jr., Peter J. Ratcliffe e Gregg L. Semenza – Nobel de Medicina

<span class="hidden">–</span>Reprodução
Os três ganhadores do Nobel de Medicina deram um importante passo para o avanço no tratamento do câncer e de doenças cardiovasculares, entre outras. Isso porque eles descobriram a fundo como a quantidade de oxigênio disponível influencia o metabolismo das células. A hipoxia, que é a diminuição da concentração de oxigênio, é uma das características das células cancerígenas.
Um dos responsáveis pela descoberta, Peter Ratcliffe, pesquisa na Universidade de Oxford, no Reino Unido, e tinha entre os membros de sua equipe a bióloga Joanna Carola.
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AtualidadesA bióloga do Piauí que trabalha com o ganhador do Nobel de Medicina 201910 out 2019 – 17h10
Olga Tokarczuk e Peter Handke – Nobel de Literatura de 2018 e 2019

<span class="hidden">–</span>Reprodução
O Nobel de Literatura deste ano veio com precedentes polêmicos e discussões ligadas à representatividade. Na edição passada, o prêmio foi cancelado após denúncias de assédio contra Jean-Claude Arnault. Ele é casado com Katarina Frostenson, membro da Academia Sueca, instituição que concede o Nobel de Literatura. Segundo as denúncias, muitos desses abusos teriam acontecido dentro de dependências da Academia.
Depois de Arnault ser sentenciado a dois anos de prisão, a instituição retomou o prêmio este ano e o concedeu a dois autores: a polonesa Olga Tokarczuk levou o prêmio de 2018 e o austríaco Peter Handke, o deste ano. Segundo a organização, Olga recebeu o prêmio por ter “uma imaginação narrativa que, com paixão enciclopédica, representa o cruzamento de fronteiras como uma forma de vida”. As obras da autora já foram publicadas em mais de 25 idiomas, e ela já foi agraciada com outros grandes prêmios literários, como o Man Booker Prize.
Já a escolha de Peter foi justificada pela Academia “por um trabalho influente que, com engenhosidade linguística, explorou a periferia e a especificidade da experiência humana”. A escrita de Peter é reconhecida como “experimental”. Reconhecido também como roteirista, ele é coautor de Asas do Desejo (1987), filme bastante premiado.
O Nobel de Literatura frustrou quem esperava vencedores não-europeus. Em uma coletiva de imprensa há poucos dias, Anders Olsson, membro da Academia, reforçou que a diversidade seria um dos nortes da escolha este ano. “Tínhamos uma visão eurocêntrica da literatura, e agora estamos olhando para o mundo todo. Anteriormente, estávamos mais enfocados nos homens. Hoje há muitas mulheres que são realmente excelentes”, declarou. Quase 73% dos autores premiados com o Nobel de Literatura são europeus.
Abiy Ahmed Ali – Nobel da Paz

<span class="hidden">–</span>Reprodução
A mais aguardada premiação do Nobel foi conferida na manhã desta sexta (11) a Abiy Ahmed Ali, o primeiro-ministro da Etiópia. A sua principal contribuição, desde que assumiu em 2018, foi para a resolução do conflito entre a Eritreia e a Etiópia, que já dura 20 anos. Na disputa pelo controle da fronteira, mais de 80 mil pessoas foram mortas.
Para além de por um fim à guerra, Abiy Ahmed Ali também vem promovendo uma série de medidas progressistas que estão tornando a Etiópia um país socialmente mais justo. Os direitos das mulheres foram ampliados, presos políticos foram libertos e as políticas do governo se tornaram mais claras e abertas à sociedade. Ahmed Ali leva para a Etiópia o Nobel da Paz de número 100.
Os ganhadores do prêmio Nobel em 2019 e sua contribuição para o mundo Publicado primeiro em https://guiadoestudante.abril.com.br/
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Nobel Prize in Medicine Awarded for Research on How Cells Manage Oxygen
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was jointly awarded to three scientists — William G. Kaelin Jr., Peter J. Ratcliffe and Gregg L. Semenza — for their work on how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.
The Nobel Assembly announced the prize at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm on Monday.
Their work established the genetic mechanisms that allow cells to respond to changes in oxygen levels. The findings have implications for treating a variety of diseases, including cancer, anemia, heart attacks and strokes.
Why did they win?
“Oxygen is the lifeblood of living organisms,” said Dr. George Daley, dean of Harvard Medical School. “Without oxygen, cells can’t survive.” But too much or too little oxygen also can be deadly. The three researchers tried to answer this question: How do cells regulate their responses?
The investigators uncovered detailed genetic responses to changing oxygen levels that allow cells in the bodies of humans and other animals sense and respond to fluctuations, increasing and decreasing how much oxygen they receive.
Why is the work important?
The discoveries reveal the cellular mechanisms that control such things as adaptation to high altitudes and how cancer cells manage to hijack oxygen. Randall Johnson, a member of the Nobel Assembly, described the work as a “textbook discovery” and said it would be something students would start learning at the most basic levels of biology education.
“This is a basic aspect of how a cell works, and I think from that standpoint alone it’s a very exciting thing,” Mr. Johnson said.
The research also has implications for treating various diseases in which oxygen is in short supply — including anemia, heart attacks and strokes — as well as for treatment of cancers that are fed by and seek out oxygen.
Who are the winners?
William G. Kaelin Jr., professor of medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham & Women’s Hospital Harvard Medical School, was drawn to science for its objectivity.
“Like any scientist, I like solving puzzles,” he said in an interview this morning.
But he had an unprepossessing start. When he was a pre-med student hoping to become a physician researcher, a professor wrote, “Mr. Kaelin appears to be a bright young man whose future lies outside of the laboratory.”
Eventually he became intrigued by a rare, genetic cancer, von Hippel-Lindau disease, that is characterized by a profusion of extra blood vessels and overproduction of erythropoietin, or EPO, a hormone that stimulates production of the red blood cells that carry oxygen.
The cancer “was really fascinating,” Dr. Kaelin said. It had unusual features, like causing the body to make a substance, vegF, that stimulates the formation of blood vessels. And the cancer can cause the body to make too many red blood cells by increasing the production of EPO.
He had a hunch about what was going awry: “I thought it had something to do with oxygen sensing.”
As it turned out, he was right.
“It is one of the great stories of biomedical science,” Dr. Daley said. “Bill is the consummate physician-scientist. He took a clinical problem and through incredibly rigorous science figured it out.”
Dr. Kaelin said he knew, of course, that today the Nobel Prize would be awarded. But his chances were “so astronomically small” that he stuck with this usual routine and did not stay up last night.
He had a dream, though, that he had not gotten the 5 a.m. call from Sweden. He woke up and looked at the time; in fact, it was just 1:30 a.m.
He went back to sleep, and when it really was 5 a.m., his phone rang.
Gregg L. Semenza, professor of genetic medicine at Johns Hopkins, said his life was changed by a high school teacher, Rose Nelson, who taught biology at Sleepy Hollow High School in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.
“She was unbelievable,” Dr. Semenza recalled in an interview. “She transmitted the wonder and joy of science and scientific discovery. She set me on a course to science.”
In college, at Harvard, he thought he would get a Ph.D. and do research in genetics. But then a family he was close to had a child with Down syndrome.
“That shifted me from being interested in genetics as kind of a scientific discipline to thinking about the impacts of genetics on people,” he said.
After attending medical school at the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Semenza set out to understand what cancer cells are searching for when they spread into surrounding tissues, and then into blood vessels that carry them around the body.
His guess was that cancer cells are searching for oxygen.
Dr. Semenza turned his attention to the gene the guides production of EPO. Once it is activated, the body makes more oxygen carrying red blood cells. But how is that switch turned on when the body is deprived of oxygen?
As a geneticist, he was trained to study rare genetic diseases. But his work on cellular responses to oxygen led him to study such common diseases as heart disease and cancer.
At first, he divided his attention between the two conditions. More recently, Dr. Semenza said, he has focused on cancer, looking for ways to use what he has learned to find new ways to attack tumors.
Dr. Semenza was asleep when the call from Sweden came this morning, and did not get to his phone in time to answer it. The phone rang again a few minutes later.
“I heard this very distinguished gentleman tell me I was going to receive the Nobel Prize,” he said. “I was shocked, of course. And I was kind of in a daze. I’ve been in a daze ever since.”
But he added, “It’s been wonderful.”
Peter J. Ratcliffe, the third Nobelist, is the director of clinical research at the Francis Crick Institute in London and director of the Target Discovery Institute at Oxford.
He became a medical researcher almost by chance. “I was a tolerable schoolboy chemist and intent on a career in industrial chemistry,” he said in a speech in 2016. “The ethereal but formidable headmaster appeared one morning in the chemistry classroom. ‘Peter,’ he said with unnerving serenity, ‘I think you should study medicine’. And without further thought, my university application forms were changed.”
He became a kidney specialist, fascinated by the way the organs regulate production of EPO in response to the amount of oxygen available. Some colleagues, he said, felt this was not very important.
But he persisted, intrigued by the scientific puzzle. “We set about the problem of EPO regulation, which might have been seen, and some did see, as a niche area,” he said in a telephone interview posted by the Nobel Committee on Twitter.
“But I believed it was tractable, it could be solved by someone. The impact of that became evident later.”
The research is an illustration of the value of basic research, he added: “We make knowledge, That’s what I do as a publicly funded scientist. It is good knowledge. It is true. It is correct.”
But, he added, “We set out on a journey without a clear understanding of the value of that knowledge.”
When the call from Sweden came, Dr. Ratcliffe was writing a grant proposal. Today he will continue working on it.
“I’m happy about it,” he said of the Nobel Prize. But also was not enthusiastic about being thrust into the public eye.
“I’ll do my duty, I hope,” he said.
“It’s a tribute to the lab, to those who helped me set it up and worked with me on the project over the years, to many others in the field, and not least to my family for their forbearance of all the up and downs,” he said in a statement released by Oxford.
Who won the 2018 Nobel for medicine?
The prize last year went to James P. Allison of the United States and Tasuku Honjo of Japan for their work on immunotherapy, for unleashing the body’s immune system to attack cancer. This breakthrough has resulted in an entirely new class of drugs and brought lasting remissions to many patients who had run out of options.
Who else won a Nobel Prize this year?
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to James Peebles, Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz for their contributions to the understanding of the evolution of the universe and Earth’s place in the cosmos.
The prize for chemistry was shared by John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for their work on the development of lithium-ion batteries.
When will the other Nobel Prizes be announced?
_____
Michael Wolgelenter contributed reporting.
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Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Thank John D Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the lithium-ion batteries that you use in everyday life from mobile phones to electric vehicles.
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be awarded to John D. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the development of lithium-ion batteries, the Nobel Committee said on Wednesday.
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives and are used in everything from mobile phones to laptops and electric vehicles. Through their work, this year’s Chemistry Laureates have laid the foundation of a wireless, fossil fuel-free society, the Nobel Committee said in a statement.
In the early 1970s, Dr. Whittingham, awarded this year’s Chemistry Prize, used lithium’s enormous drive to release its outer electron when he developed the first functional lithium battery. Dr. Goodenough doubled the lithium battery’s potential, creating the right conditions for a vastly more powerful and useful battery.
Dr. Yoshino succeeded in eliminating pure lithium from the battery, instead basing it wholly on lithium ions, which are safer than pure lithium. This made the battery workable in practice.
The result was a lightweight, hardwearing battery that could be charged hundreds of times before its performance deteriorated. The advantage of lithium-ion batteries is that they are not based upon chemical reactions that break down the electrodes, but upon lithium ions flowing back and forth between the anode and cathode.
Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives since they first entered the market in 1991. Today, lithium batteries are used everywhere from mobile phones to electric vehicles, and also to store significant amounts of energy from solar and wind power, making possible a fossil fuel-free society.
The Physics award was given to a Canadian-American cosmologist James Peebles for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology, and two Swiss scientists — Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz — for discovery of an exoplanet that orbits a sun-like star.
On Monday, two Americans and one British scientist Drs. William G. Kaelin Jr. of Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Gregg L. Semenza of Johns Hopkins University and Peter J. Ratcliffe at the Francis Crick Institute in Britain and Oxford University won the prize for advances in physiology or medicine. They were cited for their discoveries of “how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.”
Read more thehindu
source https://www.gyanns.com/2019/10/chemistry-nobel-goes-to-three.html
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Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Thank John D Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the lithium-ion batteries that you use in everyday life from mobile phones to electric vehicles.
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be awarded to John D. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the development of lithium-ion batteries, the Nobel Committee said on Wednesday.
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives and are used in everything from mobile phones to laptops and electric vehicles. Through their work, this year’s Chemistry Laureates have laid the foundation of a wireless, fossil fuel-free society, the Nobel Committee said in a statement.
In the early 1970s, Dr. Whittingham, awarded this year’s Chemistry Prize, used lithium’s enormous drive to release its outer electron when he developed the first functional lithium battery. Dr. Goodenough doubled the lithium battery’s potential, creating the right conditions for a vastly more powerful and useful battery.
Dr. Yoshino succeeded in eliminating pure lithium from the battery, instead basing it wholly on lithium ions, which are safer than pure lithium. This made the battery workable in practice.
The result was a lightweight, hardwearing battery that could be charged hundreds of times before its performance deteriorated. The advantage of lithium-ion batteries is that they are not based upon chemical reactions that break down the electrodes, but upon lithium ions flowing back and forth between the anode and cathode.
Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives since they first entered the market in 1991. Today, lithium batteries are used everywhere from mobile phones to electric vehicles, and also to store significant amounts of energy from solar and wind power, making possible a fossil fuel-free society.
The Physics award was given to a Canadian-American cosmologist James Peebles for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology, and two Swiss scientists — Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz — for discovery of an exoplanet that orbits a sun-like star.
On Monday, two Americans and one British scientist Drs. William G. Kaelin Jr. of Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Gregg L. Semenza of Johns Hopkins University and Peter J. Ratcliffe at the Francis Crick Institute in Britain and Oxford University won the prize for advances in physiology or medicine. They were cited for their discoveries of “how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.”
Read more thehindu
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Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Thank John D Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the lithium-ion batteries that you use in everyday life from mobile phones to electric vehicles.
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be awarded to John D. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the development of lithium-ion batteries, the Nobel Committee said on Wednesday.
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives and are used in everything from mobile phones to laptops and electric vehicles. Through their work, this year’s Chemistry Laureates have laid the foundation of a wireless, fossil fuel-free society, the Nobel Committee said in a statement.
In the early 1970s, Dr. Whittingham, awarded this year’s Chemistry Prize, used lithium’s enormous drive to release its outer electron when he developed the first functional lithium battery. Dr. Goodenough doubled the lithium battery’s potential, creating the right conditions for a vastly more powerful and useful battery.
Dr. Yoshino succeeded in eliminating pure lithium from the battery, instead basing it wholly on lithium ions, which are safer than pure lithium. This made the battery workable in practice.
The result was a lightweight, hardwearing battery that could be charged hundreds of times before its performance deteriorated. The advantage of lithium-ion batteries is that they are not based upon chemical reactions that break down the electrodes, but upon lithium ions flowing back and forth between the anode and cathode.
Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives since they first entered the market in 1991. Today, lithium batteries are used everywhere from mobile phones to electric vehicles, and also to store significant amounts of energy from solar and wind power, making possible a fossil fuel-free society.
The Physics award was given to a Canadian-American cosmologist James Peebles for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology, and two Swiss scientists — Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz — for discovery of an exoplanet that orbits a sun-like star.
On Monday, two Americans and one British scientist Drs. William G. Kaelin Jr. of Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Gregg L. Semenza of Johns Hopkins University and Peter J. Ratcliffe at the Francis Crick Institute in Britain and Oxford University won the prize for advances in physiology or medicine. They were cited for their discoveries of “how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.”
Read more thehindu
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Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Thank John D Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the lithium-ion batteries that you use in everyday life from mobile phones to electric vehicles.
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be awarded to John D. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino for the development of lithium-ion batteries, the Nobel Committee said on Wednesday.
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives and are used in everything from mobile phones to laptops and electric vehicles. Through their work, this year’s Chemistry Laureates have laid the foundation of a wireless, fossil fuel-free society, the Nobel Committee said in a statement.
In the early 1970s, Dr. Whittingham, awarded this year’s Chemistry Prize, used lithium’s enormous drive to release its outer electron when he developed the first functional lithium battery. Dr. Goodenough doubled the lithium battery’s potential, creating the right conditions for a vastly more powerful and useful battery.
Dr. Yoshino succeeded in eliminating pure lithium from the battery, instead basing it wholly on lithium ions, which are safer than pure lithium. This made the battery workable in practice.
The result was a lightweight, hardwearing battery that could be charged hundreds of times before its performance deteriorated. The advantage of lithium-ion batteries is that they are not based upon chemical reactions that break down the electrodes, but upon lithium ions flowing back and forth between the anode and cathode.
Chemistry Nobel goes to three scientists for developing lithium-ion batteries
Lithium-ion batteries have revolutionised our lives since they first entered the market in 1991. Today, lithium batteries are used everywhere from mobile phones to electric vehicles, and also to store significant amounts of energy from solar and wind power, making possible a fossil fuel-free society.
The Physics award was given to a Canadian-American cosmologist James Peebles for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology, and two Swiss scientists — Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz — for discovery of an exoplanet that orbits a sun-like star.
On Monday, two Americans and one British scientist Drs. William G. Kaelin Jr. of Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Gregg L. Semenza of Johns Hopkins University and Peter J. Ratcliffe at the Francis Crick Institute in Britain and Oxford University won the prize for advances in physiology or medicine. They were cited for their discoveries of “how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.”
Read more thehindu
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Nobel Prize in Chemistry Honours Breakthroughs in Lithium-Ion Batteries
https://sciencespies.com/news/nobel-prize-in-chemistry-honours-breakthroughs-in-lithium-ion-batteries/
Nobel Prize in Chemistry Honours Breakthroughs in Lithium-Ion Batteries
If you’re reading this on a cellphone or laptop computer, you might thank the three winners of this year’s Nobel Prize in chemistry for their work on lithium-ion batteries.
The batteries power cellphones, laptops, electric cars and countless other devices of modern life, and could become the foundation for a greener future. Batteries that economically store energy from renewable sources like the wind and sun open up new possibilities to curb global warming.
“This is a highly charged story of tremendous potential,” quipped Olof Ramstrom of the Nobel committee for chemistry.
The prize announced Wednesday went to John B. Goodenough, 97, an engineering professor at the University of Texas; M. Stanley Whittingham, 77, a chemistry professor at the State University of New York at Binghamton; and Akira Yoshino, 71, of chemical company Asahi Kasei and Meijo University in Japan.
“The heart of the phone is the rechargeable battery. The heart of the electric vehicle is the rechargeable battery. The success and failure of so many new technologies depends on the batteries,” said Alexej Jerschow, a chemist at New York University, whose research focuses on the lithium-ion battery.
Goodenough, who is considered an intellectual giant of solid-state chemistry and physics, is the oldest person to ever win a Nobel Prize — edging out Arthur Ashkin, who was 96 when he was awarded the Nobel for physics last year.
Goodenough said he is grateful he was not forced to retire at age 65.
“So I’ve had an extra 33 years to keep working,” he told reporters in London, where he was to accept another prize.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Whittingham said he had no inkling that his work decades ago would have such a profound impact.
“We thought it would be nice and help in a few things, but never dreamed it would revolutionize electronics and everything else,” he said.
And in Japan, Yoshino said he hoped the technology could enable greater adoption of renewable energy sources.
“We must create a society where electricity is generated by renewables in order to resolve the climate change problem,” he said.
The three scientists each had unique breakthroughs that laid the foundation for the development of a commercial rechargeable battery, an alternative to older alkaline batteries containing lead, nickel or zinc that had their origins in the 19th century.
All batteries store chemical energy that can be converted into electricity. But earlier batteries were unsafe, too heavy or not rechargeable — limiting their practical use
In the 1970s, Whittingham, who had researched superconductors at Stanford University, was hired by Exxon at a time when the petroleum giant was investing in research on energy storage.
Whittingham harnessed the tendency of lithium — the lightest metal — to give away its electrons to make a lightweight battery capable of generating just over two volts.
By 1980, building on Whittingham’s work, Goodenough had doubled the capacity of the battery to four volts by using cobalt oxide in the cathode — one of two electrodes, along with the anode, that make up the ends of a battery.
But that battery remained too unstable for general commercial use. That’s where Yoshino’s work in the 1980s came in. He eliminated the volatile pure lithium from the battery, and instead opted for lithium ions that are safer. He added another material in one electrode that reduced the potential for fires.
This step paved the way for the first lightweight, safe, durable and rechargeable commercial batteries to be built and enter the market in 1991.
Whittingham called the prize a “recognition for the whole field,” adding that “hundreds of people have worked on lithium-ion batteries.”
Building on this foundation could enable broader use of renewable energy sources that generate power at variable times.
“Batteries are the bridge between when the sun is shining and when people need to use the energy,” said Amanda Morris, a chemist at Virginia Tech University.
The three winners will share a SEK 9-million ($918,000 or roughly RS. 6.5 crores) cash award. Their gold medals and diplomas will be conferred in Stockholm on December 10 — the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobel’s death in 1896.
The announcement came on the third day of Nobel week.
On Tuesday, Canadian American James Peebles won the Nobel physics prize for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology together with Swiss scientists Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz, who were honored for finding an exoplanet — a planet outside our solar system — that orbits a solar-type star.
Americans William G. Kaelin Jr. and Gregg L. Semenza and Britain’s Peter J. Ratcliffe won the Nobel for advances in physiology or medicine on Monday. They were cited for their discoveries of “how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.”
Two Nobel literature laureates are to be announced Thursday — one for 2018 and one for 2019 — because last year’s award was suspended after a sex-abuse scandal rocked the Swedish Academy. The coveted Nobel Peace Prize is Friday and the economics award will be announced on Monday.
The chemistry laureates said the field and its applications are still a work in progress.
“Lithium-ion itself is still full of unknowns,” said Yoshino.
He said he visits Goodenough nearly every year in Texas.
“For him, I’m like his son,” he said. “He takes very good care of me.”
Goodenough, in his own way, seemed to return the favour, telling reporters that in all of his 97 years: “What am I most proud of? I don’t know, I would say all my friends.”
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via Today Bharat nbsp; Polish novelist Olga Tokarczuk and Austrian writer Peter Handke won the 2018 and 2019 Nobel Prizes for literature on October 10, after a yearrsquo;s hiatus in awarding the prize due to sex abuse allegations that rocked the secretive Swedish Academy, which selects the laureates. Ms. Tokarczuk won for works that explore the ldquo;crossing of boundaries as a form of liferdquo;, the academy said on October 10. The Nobel Prize in Literature for 2019 Mr. Handke ldquo;for an influential work that with linguistic ingenuity has explored the periphery and the specificity of human experiencerdquo; the Committee said. Ms. Tokarczuk is only the 15th woman to win the Nobel Prize for literature in more than a century. Of the 11 Nobels awarded so far this week, all the other laureates have been men. The literature prize was cancelled last year after an exodus at the exclusive Swedish Academy, which chooses the winners, following sex abuse allegations. Jean-Claude Arnault, the husband of a former academy member, was convicted last year of two rapes in 2011. Arnault allegedly also leaked the name of Nobel Prize literature winners seven times. The Nobel Foundation had warned that another group could be picked to award the prize if the academy didnrsquo;t improve its tarnished image, but said in March it was satisfied the Swedish Academy had revamped itself and restored trust. The 2018 and 2019 awards were chosen by the Swedish Academyrsquo;s Nobel Committee, a new body made up of four academy members and five ldquo;external specialistsrdquo;. Nobel organisers say the committee suggests two names which then must be approved by the Swedish Academy. Itrsquo;s unclear whether the academy members simply rubber-stamped the expertsrsquo; choice. In his will, Swedish industrialist and dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel specifically designated the Swedish Academy as the institution responsible for the Nobel Prize in literature. Nobel decided the physics, chemistry and medicine should be awarded in Stockholm, and the peace prize in Oslo. His exact reasons for having an institution in Norway hand out the peace prize is unclear, but during his lifetime Sweden and Norway were joined in a union, which was dissolved in 1905. The coveted Nobel Peace Prize set to be awarded on October 11 and the economics award on October 14. Wednesdayrsquo;s chemistry prize went to John B. Goodenough, a German-born engineering professor at the University of Texas; M. Stanley Whittingham, a British-American chemistry professor at the State University of New York at Binghamton; and Japanrsquo;s Akira Yoshino, of Asahi Kasei Corporation and Meijo University. On October 8, Canadian-born James Peebles, 84, an emeritus professor at Princeton University, won the physics prize for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology together with Swiss scientists Michel Mayor, 77, and Didier Queloz, 53, both of the University of Geneva. The latter were honoured for finding an exoplanet a planet outside our solar system that orbits a solar-type star. A day earlier, two Americans and one British scientist Drs. William G. Kaelin Jr. of Harvard Medical School and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Gregg L. Semenza of Johns Hopkins University and Peter J. Ratcliffe of Britainrsquo;s Francis Crick Institute and Oxford University won the prize for advances in physiology or medicine. They were cited for their discoveries of ldquo;how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availabilityrdquo;. With the glory comes a 9-million kronor ($918,000) cash award, a gold medal and a diploma. The laureates receive them at an elegant ceremony on Dec. 10, the anniversary of Nobelrsquo;s death in 1896, in Stockholm and in Oslo.
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October 09, 2019 at 06:29AM
(STOCKHOLM) — Three scientists on Wednesday were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their contributions to the development of lithium-ion batteries, which have reshaped energy storage and transformed cars, mobile phones and many other devices in an increasingly portable and electronic world.
The prize went to John B. Goodenough of the University of Texas; M. Stanley Whittingham of the State University of New York at Binghamton; and Akira Yoshino of Asahi Kasei Corporation and Meijo University in Japan.
Goran Hansson, secretary general of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, said the prize was about “a rechargeable world.” In a statement, the committee said lithium-ion batteries “have revolutionized our lives” — and the laureates “laid the foundation of a wireless, fossil fuel-free society.”
The Nobel committee said the lithium-ion battery has its roots in the oil crisis in the 1970s, when Whittingham was working to develop methods aimed at leading to fossil fuel-free energy technologies.
The prizes come with a 9-million kronor ($918,000) cash award, a gold medal and a diploma that are conferred on Dec. 10 — the anniversary of Nobel’s death in 1896 — in Stockholm and in Oslo, Norway.
Prize founder Alfred Nobel, a Swedish industrialist who invented dynamite, decided the physics, chemistry, medicine and literature prizes should be awarded in Stockholm, and the peace prize in Oslo.
On Tuesday, Canadian-born James Peebles won the Physics Prize for his theoretical discoveries in cosmology together with Swiss scientists Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz, who were honored for finding an exoplanet — a planet outside our solar system — that orbits a solar-type star.
Americans William G. Kaelin Jr. and Gregg L. Semenza and Britain’s Peter J. Ratcliffe won the Nobel Prize for advances in physiology or medicine on Monday. They were cited for their discoveries of “how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.”
Two literature laureates are to be announced Thursday, because last year’s award was suspended after a scandal rocked the Swedish Academy. The coveted Nobel Peace Prize is Friday and the economics award on Monday.
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Residential real estate transfers, March 18
Birge, William J. and Constance L. to Charleston Homes LLC, 7414 N. 161st St., $37,450.
North Ida Street Investments LLC to Richland Homes LLC, 7226 N. 162nd St., $39,950.
Boyer Young Equities XV-Heritage LLC to River Stone Custom Homes LLC, 10213 N. 152nd Ave., $39,950.
State Street Investments LLC to Richland Homes LLC, 15981 Reynolds St., $42,950.
State Street Investments LLC to Richland Homes LLC, 16004 Young St., $43,950.
Sweetbriar Syndicate LLC to Zurek, Nicole and Bradly, 11822 N. 175th Circle, $150,000.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Angeles, Ismael, 14476 Gilder Ave., $192,900.
Legacy Homes Omaha LLC to Krasne, Adam J., 16091 Weber St., $200,812.
Legacy Homes Omaha LLC to Kamstra, Tracy L. and Robert W., 15064 Sandpiper St., $265,452.
Sidoruk, Boris and Cameo to Maus, Andrew J., 7304 N. 151st Circle, $400,000.
Fire Ridge Real Estate LLC to Brown, Carol J., 19653 Harney St., $30,000.
Elkhorn Highlands Inc. to Hildy Construction Inc., 2434 N. 191st Ave., $34,250.
South Hamptons Land Development LLC to Belt Construction Co. Inc., 5810 S. 238th St., $84,950.
Pacific Windgate II LLC to Kubat, Joseph S. and Amy L., 2016 S. 208th St., $85,000.
Castle Brook Land Development LLC to Castle Brook Builders LLC, 1444 S. 211th St., $90,000.
Malibu Holdings LLC to Foxx, James B. and Kimberly S., 2415 S. 219th St., $93,000.
Binder, Kevin G. Trust to Baltzell, Beau and Amy, 21428 Fieldcrest Drive, $186,500.
Wilmes, Laura to Duren, Jack D. and Shelby S., 1617 N. 208th St., $235,000.
Baker, Larry and Alma to Eley, Lisa A., 19105 Lake St., $265,000.
Charleston Homes LLC to Kruse, Larry C., 4715 N. 205th Ave., $298,450.
Schmid, Daniel A. and Veronica L. to Wilcher, Joel D. and Mary, 2727 N. 191st St., $299,900.
Cambridge Homes LLC to Johnson, Mitchell J., 2603 N. 185th St., $350,000.
Cooper, John S. and Susan M. to Powell, Robert S. Jr. and Rachel H., 18401 Jackson St., $373,000.
Trademark Homes Inc. to Thummalapalli, Rama and Kakumanu, Sireesha, 18909 Boyd St., $397,992.
Landmark Performance Corp. to Lucey, Guy E. and Julie A., 3818 N. 190th St., $405,406.
Landmark Performance Corp. to Sickler, Vince and Mallory, 4013 N. 190th St., $409,900.
Vencil Construction Inc. to Milenkovich, Richard D. and Shannon L., 2305 N. 188th St., $410,000.
Concept Homes & Design Inc. to Graves, Thomas C. and Serafini, Lisa Y., 2402 N. 188th St., $490,000.
Luke Custom Homes LLC to Phipps, Amber and Worsley, Michael, 19021 Lafayette Ave., $725,146.
Johnson, Scott L. and Debra D. to Costello, Regina and Christopher, 115 E. Whittingham St., $92,000.
Hamel, Michael R. and Carol L. to Stene, Terrie L., 508 N. Front St., $95,000.
Bonella, David A. Estate to Albers, Ryan, 22637 Wilson Ave., $160,000.
Rolfe, Jeanne A. and Scott, Mary A. to Jackson, Ryan A. Trust, 312 S. 16th St., $150,000.
Salerno, Michael G. to KR Properties LLC, 420 S. 11th St., $320,000.
Johnson, Michael L. to Kuester, Anthony G. and Catherine E., 1502 Jones St., $414,000.
Mahoney, Richard J. and Susan K. to Murow, Daniel and Bolling, Charity, 1308 Jackson St., $480,000.
Burke, Alice H. Trust to LCT Homes LLC, 5905 Sahler St., $54,372.
Anderson, Delores M. to McMurphy, James P. and Sherry L., 5635 Ohio St., $60,000.
Arnold, Kimberly L. and Walker, Harold R. Jr. to Qualified Property Solutions LLC, 3514 N. 55th St., $72,000.
McGill, Kathy and Brian to Huss, Ryan, 6664 Decatur St., $102,000.
Foster, Terry to Huitron, Esber and Ochoa Soto, Yesenia, 4506 Laurel Ave., $20,000.
Kidwell, Nannette to Cyr, Keith P., 3551 N. 59th St., $20,000.
H & S Partnership LLP to Van Noort, Jared and Alexandria, 6619 Franklin St., $115,000.
Pomerleau, Christopher and Sharma, Shivani to Lempka, Justin, 4919 N. 64th St., $119,250.
Home Start LLC to Shwe, A. and Lay, Moo, 6634 Curtis Ave., $141,000.
HBI LLC to Irvin, Thomas C. and Barkley Hunter, Heather, 2304 N. 50th St., $173,000.
Hall, Ethan and Sadieto Arroyo, Arturo, 3116 Vinton St., $50,000.
Bank of America to Miklas, Joseph M., 3920 Gold St., $60,100.
Truong, Thanh T. and Chau, Bich to Shirk Management LLC, 4212 Barker Ave., $70,000.
Cubrich, Robert J. to Buhl, Marc and Hope, 2814 S. 38th Ave., $20,000.
Brink, Edward E., trustee, to 100 Year Homes Inc., 2211 Hanscom Blvd., $105,000.
Chaidez Blanco, Jubentino and Chaidez, Delfina to Roach, Daniel and Myers, Jennifer, 2424 S. 42nd St., $108,000.
Seykora, Daniel R. and Jacqueline M. to Rokahr, Shane and Makayla, 4381 Mason St., $109,900.
Pratt, Scott L. Jr. to Salgado, Liliana, 2730 S. 41st St., $138,000.
Vazquez, David A. to Garcia, Roger and Yanira L., 3635 Olin Ave., $142,000.
Zych, Robert J. and Janet M. to Mumm, Joshua D. and Kerry L., 2122 S. 33rd St., $145,000.
Lynch, Ryan and Allen, Stephanie L. to Mertes, Micah J. and Duerr, Erin R., 3201 S. 32nd Ave., $185,000.
Mitchell, Scott B. Sr. and Mitchell, Mary M. to Mullen, Brent and Carmichael, Kristen, 1823 Twinridge Blvd., $235,000.
Fox, Robert A. and Mary A. Trust to Bode, Akanksha and Thaddaeus, 3560 Woolworth Ave., $252,000.
Leise, Michele and Andrew to Wilton, Kristina M. and Stanley R., 4213 Walnut St., $270,000.
Uptown Properties LLC to Widhalm, Christian, 919 S. 31st St., $295,000.
Lee, Shawn M. and Shelly to Cherry, Roger and Patricia, 2229 S. 59th St., $65,000.
Steffen, Kenneth L. and Rosemary J. to Kessler, Randall M., 3101 S. 56th St., $127,950.
Hankin, Robert B. and Pangle, Sarah to Widener, Benjamin B. and Cassandra J., 4836 Woolworth Ave., $205,000.
Davis, A. Scott to Cai, Rongxuan and Ding, Ping, 4678 Pine St., $225,000.
Gillaspie, Elizabeth A. to O’Connor, Joseph R. and Caitlin M., 5649 Emile St., $312,000.
Mejstrik, Marten R. to Bost, Joseph and Rachel, 5714 Jones St., $429,000.
HBI LLC to Arias, Victor, 6227 Wilson Circle, $35,000.
Zagata, Joseph and Margaret to Rodriguez, Juan M., 4225 S. 22nd St., $56,500.
Morales, Martin C. to Sandoval, Salvador M. and Bustamante, Lilla S., 5014 S. 36th St., $66,500.
Czerwinski, Mark and Michele to Uttecht, Larry H. Jr., 4485 Dayton St., $70,000.
Legacy Ventures I LLC to W Realty LLC, 4019 S. 35th St., $74,000.
Anderson, Paul and Suzanne to Sherman Properties IV LLC, 3819 S. 33rd St., $82,500.
Kankovsky, Frank J. to Hernandez, Claudio J., 6103 S. 19th St., $104,000.
Ryan, Daniel J. and Rayleen to Arman, Karley A., 5613 S. 22nd St., $115,000.
Beck, David A. and Valerie to Gomez, Pedro M., 2933 S. 18th St., $33,000.
Favela, Fidel and Lucia to P3M Investments LLC, 2210 S. 15th St., $115,000.
Koethe, Scott and Julie to Mejstrik, Marten R., 1233 Marcy Plaza, $268,000.
Dietzler, Brittany L. to Thomas, Brian A., 715 Pacific St., $280,000.
Johns, Carol A. and Williams, Eddy M. to Habitat for Humanity of Omaha Inc., 4210 N. 21st St., $22,000.
U Name It Construction LLC to Valdivieso, Cesar E., 5215 N. 14th St., $20,000.
Silva Moreno, Jose J. to Linares, Isai, 2616 N. 15th St., $22,600.
Horning, Fred H. Trust to Rash, Andre J., 3852 Decatur St., $27,500.
Barn Old Inc. to Arnold, Erin, 4545 N. 40th St., $35,000.
Hollis, Lisa and Courtney to Gemerson Properties LLC, 3730 N. 42nd St., $42,200.
3949 Kansas Avenue LLC to DG Homes LLC, 3949 Kansas Ave., $66,000.
Three T Investments LLC to Moran Asencio, Olinda C., 4510 N. 41st St., $70,000.
Punch It Out Inc. to Harrington, Pamela J., 3472 Fowler Circle, $110,000.
CESH LLC to Armstrong, Marc L. and Sammie J., 2879 Ida St., $99,900.
HBI LLC to James, Stephanie, 2879 Titus Ave., $110,000.
Andrews, Kourtney to Garrison, Alexandra and Joneson, Jeffrey, 6710 N. 41st St., $144,500.
Science Safety Inc. to Red Ladder LLC, 8214 Hillside Drive, $50,500.
A & A Properties LLC to Anderson, Salina V. and Russell L., 515 S. 78th St., $97,000.
Bird, Travis J. and Molly J. to Lavelle, Mary E. and Michael J., 923 N. 74th Ave., $135,500.
Hoesing, Nicholas to Pfeffer, Brian J. and Suhr, Corrie A., 842 N. 76th St., $145,000.
No Equity Homes LLC to Mahoney, Susan K., 529 S. 87th Circle, $206,000.
Turner, Paul J. and Beverly G. to Russell, Julia, 902 S. 88th St., $360,000.
Kavan Homes Inc. to Troia, Andrew and Duff, Corey, 9926 Harney Parkway, $462,500.
Castle Creek Development LLC to Pine Crest Homes LLC, 5369 N. 155th St., $43,500.
Castle Creek Development LLC to Lambert, Edwin M. and Kathleen A., 5546 N. 153rd Ave., $47,950.
G Lee Homes Inc. to Hildy Construction Inc., 3218 N. 178th St., $80,000.
McMichael, Donald H. Jr. Estate to Comer, Justin F. and Mary A., 3325 N. 148th Court, $135,500.
Kelly, Scott and Shelley to Hill, Dustin R. and Love, Kathy, 14927 Wirt St., $157,500.
Albus, Gregg J. and Laura J. to Monaghan, Angela K., 4802 N. 177th St., $165,000.
Peterson, Amy N. to OHG LLC, 17170 Manderson St., $168,500.
Feregrino, John Jr. and Lindsey M. to Oripov, Bakhrom and Karrie K., 15214 Butler Ave., $205,000.
Clure, Brett and Megan M. to Goren, Eran, 15111 Meredith Ave., $211,500.
Syed, Asim J. and Hussain, Tehniyet to Brue, Erinn, 16526 Ames Ave., $241,000.
Fitzgerald, Patrick M. and Jill M. to Herr, Dennis W. and Sheri J., 3913 N. 161st Ave., $259,900.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Kelly, Scott P. and Shelley A., 17205 Meredith Ave., $272,900.
Slotsve, Wayne E. and Donna H. to Ferrel, Wesley R. and Stacy J., 2101 N. 144th Ave., $273,000.
Paulson, Clinton M. and Katie M. to Ginn, Michaela, 15215 Vernon Ave., $273,000.
Prairie Homes Inc. to Rodriguez, Wolfgang and Troncoso, Claudia L., 2304 N. 176th Ave., $399,950.
Ramm Construction Inc. to Podrazo, William J. Jr. and Deborah J. Trust of 2015, 17809 Binney St., $416,557.
Hiatt, Mary E. Estate to Geaney, Mark, 5609 S. 52nd St., $68,500.
Hasbrouck, Jerry D. and Joanie L. to Martinez, Ciro, 4504 S. 48th St., $100,000.
Legacy Ventures I LLC to W Realty LLC, 5037 S. 49th St., $105,000.
Czerwinski, Mark L. and Michele M. to Uttecht, Larry H. Jr., 4713 S. 53rd St., $140,000.
Knoll, Steven C. to Urbina-Guerrero, Jose E. and Urbina-Gonzalez, Maria M., 4819 K St., $176,500.
McGaha, Scott A. and Amy L. to Smith, Brian and Michelle R., 1622 N. 174th St., $296,000.
Legacy Ventures I LLC to W Realty LLC, 7529 Mary St., $84,000.
Evans, Jacob to Evans, Sara and Ryan, 7910 Redick Ave., $140,000.
Washington, Pierre D. and Anna M. to Conte, Michael J. and Kayla R., 8045 Newport Ave., $141,000.
Miller, Theresa K. to Tway, Pite and Paw, November, 8005 Bauman Ave., $144,000.
Vargas, Davey and Saphire B. to Schenkelberg, Jerry A. and Jennifer J. Trust, 6958 N. 87th Ave., $147,500.
Chapman, Jared J. to Hill, Justin and Sturdivant, Kayleen, 8212 Clay St., $150,000.
Nelson, Benjamin L. and Jamie to Okuma, Hugh and Jennifer, 7530 N. 82nd Circle, $153,000.
Rokusek, Emily to Barnes, Aaron and Haley, 7338 N. 90th St., $161,000.
Dahir, Debora A. to Quinn, James D. and Vickie L., 8020 Nina St., $120,500.
Smith, Zachary A. to Kreifels, Martin F. and Charise B., 8714 A St., $140,000.
TK3 Investments LLC to Weiler, David J. and Manana N., 2824 S. 76th Ave., $140,000.
Bilek, Richard M. and Jaycie to Cruz, Gilberto and Ovato, Maira, 8173 Hascall St., $141,500.
Om 3517 S 105 Trust to KFM Properties LLC, 3517 S. 105th St., $162,000.
De Los Reyes, Manolo F. and Eden C. to Mallum, Mitchell G. and Tamera S., 7639 Wright St., $170,000.
Stroh Orians, Karen Trust to Vacek, Robert, 3125 S. 80th St., $200,000.
Firmature, Joseph Jr. and A. Gloria to Wheeler, Patricia L. and Jason W., 1305 S. 94th St., $275,000.
Bovard Sayre, Karen K. to Lofgren, Luke and Mandy, 9102 Poppleton Ave., $290,000.
Wilson, Brian A. and Caroline J. to Engel, Brian K. and Cynthia S., 2410 S. 102nd St., $407,000.
Menck, Thomas W. and Peggy to 5703 LLC, 5703 S. 77th St., $55,000.
Dynamic Properties LLC to Pusher, Jessica, 5402 S. 75th St., $129,000.
Konecky, Elisha R. to Merchant, Eric A. and Suzanne M., 6701 S. 83rd Ave., $151,500.
Kawa, John E. and Irene M. Trust to Brazil, Joe J., 4905 S. 78th Ave., $154,900.
McWilliams, Tony L. and Brenda K. to Arehart, Myles, 10321 N St., $160,000.
Curtis, Kevin M. and Jodi L. to Schultz, Alexander and Madelin, 5080 S. 106th Ave., $242,400.
Phipps, Amber R. and Worsley, Michael to Butterfield, Dean and Maurine, 6510 Daly Circle, $360,000.
Johnson, Margaret M., trustee, to Tyler, Beth L., 15905 Frances Circle, $175,000.
Jackson, Nathan and Meisha to McGuire, Colin T., 2418 S. 164th Ave., $194,000.
Roll, Joyce A. and Rex A. to Goodson, Michele and Darin C., 15932 Spring St., $194,000.
C130 LLC to Roll, Rex A. and Joyce A., 2323 S. 166th St., $235,000.
Merritt, Michelle D. to McCoy, David L. and Alisa C., 19819 Frances St., $287,500.
THT Enterprises LLC to D & J Homes LLC, 3118 Cass St., $73,000.
JSD Real Estate Co. LLC to Soethout, John, 3000 Farnam St., $79,000.
Miller, Nicholas W. and Ellen M. to Keithley, Steven G., 4127 Nicholas St., $94,000.
Foster, Christopher G. to Perry, Eliza W. and Cronin, Matthew A., 3409 California St., $116,000.
YK Holdings LLC to Gilbatrar LLC, 414 N. 31st St., $120,000.
Sifuentes-Futrell, Christine J. Trust to INE LLC, 200 S. 31st Ave., $174,000.
Costanzo, Bryan to Tranmer, Mitchell L., 200 S. 31st Ave., $182,500.
Boland, Thomas and Elena to Schenzel Properties LLC, 623 N. 47th St., $135,000.
Raiti, Angela E. and David L. Trust to Danielson, Mary A. and Hommen, Michael F., 852 N. 68th St., $176,500.
Hartle, Patricia and Dibble, Lester D. to Miller Way LLC, 2524 Benson Gardens Blvd., $48,500.
Dishong, Joseph T. and Teresa T. to Team Rhino PC, 9423 Grand Ave., $68,000.
Moehring, Melissa to Graham, Jacinda K., 4721 N. 82nd St., $143,500.
Schorle-Milan, Karla N. and Milan, David to Tian, Jing, 5005 N. 107th St., $148,000.
Mahony, Jacque to Voss, Jillian, 2705 N. 96th Drive, $149,900.
Root, Lynn E. to Seredina, Yelizaveta M. and Ellis, Richard W., 4210 Terrace Drive, $170,000.
Borg, Michael A. and Suzanne M. to Adanlete, Veve, 9524 Sprague St., $170,750.
Hazlett, Jonathon J. and Dooley, Katherine L. to Gujjula, Nagarjuna and Reddy-Gujjula, Harita, 5824 N. 80th St., $197,000.
Zahm, Nicholas and Amanda to Shane, Danny and Sandy 2014 Trust, 19428 X St., $163,000.
Kiger, Jennifer M. to Jensen, Sandy, 4811 S. 189th St., $165,000.
Lash, Levi and Jenna to Stokes, Annemarie, 5623 S. 190th Terrace, $190,000.
Johnson, Judith A. Trust to Owen, Jeffrey D. and Elizabeth H., 15634 Monroe Circle, $192,000.
Meyer, Scott E. and Cindy K. to Stessman, Nicholas M., 16805 M Circle, $235,000.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Medina, Leo and Ycelsa, 19868 L St., $258,900.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Pallepati, Vivek and Dugyala, Preethi, 19879 K St., $268,400.
Yang, Andy W. and Reed, Sugiko M. to Hazard, Matthew J. and Kelsey M., 17014 T St., $280,000.
Ludwick, Dale A. and Susan M. to Kopun, Gabriel V. and Lyndsey T., 6309 S. 176th St., $292,000.
Bright, Jim A. and Penny S. to Grant, Dewan and Elizabeth, 17528 Jefferson St., $295,000.
Mills, James A. and Elizabeth A. to Black, Jordan and Megan L., 4322 S. 174th Ave., $315,000.
Pacesetter Homes Inc. to Ludwick, Dale A. and Susan M., 6707 S. 199th St., $359,654.
Simonsen, Mark J. to Ball, Melva R., 15414 R St., $130,000.
Grojean, Benjamin S. and Krystal to Omaha Homes LLC, 6527 S. 139th Circle, $135,000.
Reeves, Nicklaus J. and Tiffany L. to Byers, Donavan and Brandy, 14304 Anne St., $135,000.
Brink, Edward E., trustee, to Peters, Susan A. and James R., 5529 S. 152nd St., $145,000.
Markham, Nicholas P. and Marlena L. to Neely, Roger, 5138 S. 121st St., $155,000.
United Equity LLC to Tran, Whitney D. and Tri, 13567 Polk St., $155,000.
Feld, Kerry, trustee, to 5109 Real Estate LLC, 14616 Monroe St., $155,600.
Book, Judith K. Trust to Wills, Jacqueline, 6013 Oakcrest Plaza, $160,000.
Chamberlain, Catherine S. and Medina, Gilbert S. to Spomer, Julie, 4374 S. 154th St., $210,000.
Hauptman, Nathan R. and Molly to Holtmeyer, Kyle D. and Elizabeth, 4368 S. 149th Avenue Circle, $222,750.
Lewis-Starostka Inc. to Chen, Xiaolong and Wang, Yuyu, 7159 N. 122nd Ave., $41,900.
Lewis-Starostka Inc. to Luethge Homes LLC, 11562 Scott St., $59,000.
Deer Creek Reserve LLC to Pacesetter Homes Inc., 8011 N. 129th St., $72,000.
Deer Creek Reserve LLC to Hildy Construction Inc., 12922 Reynolds St., $130,000.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Peitz, Amy S. and Nathan G., 7423 N. 140th Ave., $228,800.
Brown, Tyler J. and Kaitlyn M. to Sherman, Terry W. and Mary L., 13962 Potter Parkway, $235,000.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Houser-Hanson, Tamala R., 13940 Wood Valley Drive, $252,300.
Pedersen, Chad M. and Melissa A. to Smith, Todd E., 7901 N. 116th St., $278,000.
Luedtke, Joseph Estate to Molnar Investments 401K Trust, 3510 S. 120th St., $135,000.
Anglemyer, Taylor and Jillian to Jacobsen, Alexander J. and Amanda J., 2318 S. 125th St., $152,500.
Hancock, Eric and Traci to Cook, Jasmine A. and Cook, Latashia S., 2323 S. 133rd Ave., $159,000.
Hitzfeld, Carol A. to Rohde, Karen A., 14817 Arbor St., $160,000.
Buck, Christopher M. and Christine A. to Zart, Daniel and Leah, 3409 S. 108th St., $178,000.
Moore, Jake J. to Rouse, Shannon K., 3330 S. 137th St., $179,900.
Grace Life Bible Church Of Omaha to Liberty Church Inc., 11213 Bel Air Drive, $425,000.
Legacy Ventures I LLC to W Realty LLC, 3130 Harrison St., $84,000.
Scott, Deborah L. to Awng, Naw, 6515 Newport Ave., $125,000.
Hall, Robert J. and Mel S. to Williams, Ramel L. and Stacey, 6249 Whitmore St., $147,000.
68154
Bingham, Angela M. and Patrick to Reddy, Sharath K. and Saritha, 14462 Seward St., $170,000.
Ginn, Michaela C. to Iveson, Sarah E. and Ladouceur, Joel D., 15105 Lincoln Circle, $184,900.
TSV A LLC to Bell, Patrick and Smoot, Ashley, 15505 Marcy Circle, $192,900.
Randall, Carole R. Trust to Geiger, Michael P. and Hatley Geiger, Mary E., 920 N. 146th Circle, $200,000.
Overmiller, Janis E. Trust to Orand, Steven D. and Carol K., 12371 Rose Lane, $235,000.
Burchard, Alice G. and L. John to Determan, Joseph A. and Wendy J., 13421 Parker Circle, $425,000.
Merrill, Carolyn L. and Alfred D. to Pecha, Patrick M. and Lacie C., 10810 Larimore Ave., $141,500.
Serafini, Craig to Oswald, Bianca and Clayton, 6616 N. 116th Circle, $153,000.
Claborn, Kyle B. and Sarah to Universal Assurors Agency Inc., 2717 N. 121st Ave., $156,600.
Hannum, Deena M. and Joshua E. to Gelecki, Grant S., 6230 N. 114th St., $165,000.
McCollough, Reggie J. to Faris, Tony, 6202 N. 131st Ave., $165,000.
O & H Properties Inc. to Thomas, Yvette L. and Anthony L., 13013 Jaynes Circle, $168,000.
Clure, Brett and Megan to Barnes, Jacqueline, 4825 N. 136th Ave., $252,500.
Wolf, Alexander J. and Angela S. to Ingram, Jennifer M. and Joel A., 4912 N. 139th Ave., $319,900.
Phillips, Denise L. and Daniel W. to Mead, Michele S., 506 W. 33rd Ave., $137,000.
Swanson, Steffi A., trustee, to Fay Servicing LLC, 2805 Crawford St., $78,000.
McDowell, James L. to Heaton, Tanner L., 1725 Bellevue Blvd. North, $159,000.
Hamilton, Thyroney and Oliver to Pelletier, Joel G. and Lanpher-Pelletier, Tina M., 1701 Thomas Drive, $135,000.
Halmes, Rachel and Bullock, Andrew to Wirth, Bradley S. and Halmes, Sara M., 1511 Warren St., $150,000.
McCaghy, Vincent A. and Gloria C. to McKee, Keith D. and Carleen E., 1319 Camp Gifford Road, $300,000.
Frics, Paul A. and Bonnie J. to Armstrong, Eric H. and Stephanie E., 1102 Bellevue Blvd. South, $235,000.
Dynamic Properties LLC to Svehla, John K. and Lebeda-Svehla, Kristen M., 1022 Denver St., $114,000.
Grundmayer, Gregory P. and Laura J. to Omaha RJ1 Rents LLC, 208 Meadow Drive, $143,000.
Cottonwood Investments LLC to Wacker, Jodi, 19832 Bellbrook Blvd., $380,000.
McCune Development LLC to Laid Back Lifestyles LLC, 19780 Devonshire Drive, $50,000.
Charleston Homes LLC to Mullins, Katie E., 17220 Morgan Ave., $237,000.
Isaacson, Ronald and Sheila to Grundmayer, Gregory and Laura, 128 S. Bryan St., $234,000.
McCune Development LLC to Laid Back Lifestyles LLC, 11467 S. 198th St., $50,000.
Kirkpatrick, Rochelle L. and Robert W. and Amy to Nahomy, Cory and Kim, 11203 S. 170th St., $239,000.
Cafferty, Kim B. and Mary A. to Christensen, Chad and Rachel, 10909 S. 237th St., $599,000.
Brown, Kevin P. and Jane M. to Waters, John J. and Kara A., 905 Joseph Drive, $232,000.
Rothe, Terry E. and Sandra R. to Bruyette, Matthew D., 310 Cheyenne Drive, $164,000.
Kircher, Thomas J. and Rosemarie H. to Greska, Benjamin R. and Samantha M., 302 S. Fillmore St., $250,000.
Austin, Denise J. to Burke, Liam C. and Desiree C., 2409 S. Mineral Drive, $236,000.
Donley, Jessie W. and Jenna M. to Royster, Jessica C., 1702 Eastview Drive, $242,000.
Kimberlin, Kyle and Margaret to Christiansen, Cameron L. and Wittland, Maggie K., 1304 Mesquite Circle, $320,000.
H & S Partnership LLP to VKB Properties LLC, 1202 La Port Drive, $143,000.
Empire Homes & Remodeling Inc. to Boatwright, Jason M. and Kimberly D., 11512 S. 110th St., $353,000.
Feld, Kerry, trustee, to KH2 Equity LLC, 1016 Normandy Drive, $147,000.
Kildow-Hull, Lorraine Trust to Palmer, Janice A. and Danielle E., 500 S. Seventh St., $280,000.
Sayers, Richard A. to Fryar, Rick and Kimberly, 405 S. Fourth St., $174,000.
Fryar, Rick and Kimberly C. to Brown, Jeff A. and Muggy, Brian and Samantha, 285 N. Third St., $180,000.
Cottonwood Investments LLC to Chandler, Joshua, 9713 Linden Ave., $145,000.
Ransom, Tracy E. and Chelsea D. to Lee, Jason T. and Patricia C., 3723 Lawnwood Drive, $178,000.
Linder, Howard and Hall, Echelle to MTGLQ Investors LP, 2412 Circletown Place, $144,000.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Powers, Preston J. and Kendra R., 14606 S. 23rd St., $300,000.
Curtis, Robert J. and Melanie N. to Nguyen, Toby T. and Brooks, Katie L., 14207 S. 18th St., $255,000.
Nguyen, Toby T. and Brooks, Katie L. to Munar Penaloza, Julian M. and Munar, Kristen, 13905 S. 43rd St., $212,000.
Moore, Robert B. and Jenna M. to Nikolaus, Darin L. and Laurel, 13508 S. 42nd Ave., $298,000.
Caswell, Sunee and William R. to Good, Robert L. and West, Mary K., 13206 S. 35th Ave., $220,000.
Sandiland, Thelma P. to Lukes, Leo L. and Debora C., 8820 S. 99th St., $235,000.
Anderson, Sonia. to Serow, Christopher C. and Lisa C., 8421 S. 103rd St., $385,000.
Boatwright, Jason M. and Kimberly D. to Randall, Nicholas J., 7907 S. 101st St., $258,000.
Peterson, William and Lisa to Kane, Erin M. and Misty A., 7773 Greenleaf Drive, $150,000.
Thurman, Michele R. and Todd A. to Tromler, Joshua J., 7601 Susan Ave., $150,000.
Zhao, Qiang and Jinhua to Kline, Conor O. and Lauren, 7411 Terry Drive, $119,000.
Busby, James M. and Kimberly R. to Sargent, Daniel P. and Alison E., 10075 Quail Ridge Drive, $289,000.
Royster, William and Jessica. to Nuckoles, Rodney W., 6652 Park Crest Drive, $375,000.
Stepanek, Victor C. Estate to Siders, Andy and Deanna, 5551 Maass Road, $500,000.
Richards, Jessie J. and Amanda M. to Slade, Tshara M., 4612 Waterford Ave., $235,000.
Fleuren, Daniel and Sarah to Cooper, Jacob L., 4607 Brook St., $215,000.
Ashford Hollow Development LLC to Charleston Homes LLC, 4515 Brook Circle, $40,000.
Cottonwood Investments LLC to Walsh, Kim, 324 Inglewood Circle, $314,000.
Ryba, Larry Estate to Jones, James C. and Dawna G., 15806 S. 63rd St., $221,000.
Ryba, Connie R. to Jones, James C. and Dawna G., 15806 S. 63rd St., $221,000.
Augustine, Kevin O. and Brandi S. to Maynard, Paul N. and Shannon, 1505 Beechwood Ave., $210,000.
Cook, Pamela J. and Michael K. to Brookfield Relocation Inc., 11828 Timberridge Drive, $280,000.
Brookfield Relocation Inc. to Schmidt, Wyatt A., 11828 Timberridge Drive, $280,000.
Celebrity Homes Inc. to Anderson, Alisha K., 8219 S. 190th Ave., $286,000.
Vetsch, Katlin and Justin. to Johnson, Taylor and Cara, 7721 S. 162nd Ave., $265,000.
Richland Homes LLC to Cabral, Deborah A., 16901 Aurora St., $278,000.
Baker, Donald E. and Catherine M. Trust to Frodyma, Alex and Danielle, 15726 Cherrywood St., $191,000.
Nelson Builders Inc. to Attarwala, Muffadal and Meghan M., 10628 S. 189th St., $389,000.
Jennings, David N. and Emily E. to Vargas, Octavio Y. and Lajba, Marie L., 7115 Audrey St., $192,000.
Johnson, Cara L. and Taylor S. to Newhouse, Christine, 8010 S. 154th St., $172,000.
DeMaria, John M. and Anderson, Tina L. to Peterson, James, 7605 S. 136th St., $165,000.
Blazka, Frank R. Estate to Buena Vista Development LLC, 7201 S. 148th St., $114,000.
Robles, Amy M. and Roberto to Reynolds, Maureen E., 15518 Borman St., $174,000.
Vavruska, Denise A. to Ballard, Adam and Stacia, 13522 Josephine St., $159,000.
Arter, Kim R. and Valker, William S. to McGlothen, Andrew J., 13414 Olive St., $168,000.
Huynh, Thanh and Tran. Daisy to Woodson, Makayla and Doke, Mallerie and Ryan, 13002 Edna St., $158,000.
Kreifel, Kelly J. to Beckman, Jeffery M. and Megan A., 9403 S. 28th St., $293,000.
Matthies, Robert J. to Orozco, Eliseo Jr., 5220 Gertrude St., $145,000.
Swanson, Kaye A. and Leonard C. to State of Iowa, 3634 Fourth Ave., $140,000.
Kemmish, Gerald D. and Glenda D. and Steadman, Delmar D. and Sally A. to Minor, Anna M. and Jeffrey, 501 26th Ave., $35,000.
Smith, James and Karen to Drummey, Douglas P. and Haifa M., 2304 Ave. F, $28,000.
Ellis, David M. and Jacqueline L. to Johnstone Partners LLC, 20 Country Club Acres St., $75,000.
Red Light Properties to Fox, Thomas J., 25 Spencer Circle, $131,000.
Nash, Jason M. and Kristina M. to Potvin, Dena C. and Thomas R., 5303 Carrick St., $315,000.
Whitesel, Phylis A. and Steven F. to Dewitt, George G. and Sarah D., 114 Fenwick Circle, $233,000.
Johnston, Heather and Michael to Balcom, Nicole M., 1231 Fairmount Ave., $110,000.
Council Bluffs Development Corp. LLC to Poe, Cynthia and Deborah and Matthew and Warren, 112 Autumn Circle, $185,000.
Johnson, Dorothy J. to Johnson, Alyssa and Joshua, 510 Iowa Ave., $60,000.
Broadway, George and Tremont, John A. to Suiter, Corinna, 118 N. Millard St., $335,000.
Primmer, Chad D. to Cross, Kathleen L., 526 S. Third St., $347,500.
Heyveld, Russell and Tara to Seltzer, Nicholas and Thaddeus, 508 Knox St., Macedonia, $43,000.
Deakins, Natasha M. to Seltzer, Nicholas and Thaddeus, 202 Dye St., Macedonia, $34,000.
Dickerson, Denise D. and James D. to Dickerson, Kelsey and Matthew D., 30605 Second St., Neola, $180,000.
Turner, Joan L. Trust to Anderson, Paxton M. and Turner, Brian D., 207 Kearney St., Oakland, $45,000.
Bonar, Vernel to Klahn, Duane D., 120 Main St., Treynor, $175,000.
Alan Investments III LLC to Bauerkemper, Donald, 604 Atlantic St., Walnut, $40,000.
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