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  1. أندرو هكسلي. السير.أندرو فيلدينغ هكسلي ( بالإنجليزية: Andrew Fielding Huxley )‏ ـ (ولد هامستيد بلندن في 22 نوفمبر 1917 - 30 مايو 2012) عالم فيزيولوجيا وفيزياء حيوية بريطاني ، تحصل على جائزة نوبل في الطب لعام 1963 ...

  2. 27 de jul. de 2012 · Master, 1984–90, Fellow, 1941–60 and since 1990, Trinity College, Cambridge (Hon. Fellow, 1967–90). Died 30 May 2012, aged 94. Sir Andrew Huxley, shown in his laboratory in Fig. 1, was a giant among modern physiologists, pioneering the fields of nerve conduction, and skeletal muscle activation and tension generation.

  3. 1 de ago. de 2012 · Affiliation 1 Physiological Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EG, UK. clh11@cam.ac.uk

  4. Andrew Huxley earned a master’s degree from Trinity College, at the University of Cambridge, England. Later, from 1941 to 1960, he worked at Trinity. There, Huxley served as a fellow and then director of studies, a demonstrator, an assistant director of research, and finally a reader in experimental biophysics in the Department of Physiology.

  5. 1 de ago. de 2012 · Master, 1984–90, Fellow, 1941–60 and since 1990, Trinity College, Cambridge (Hon. Fellow, 1967–90). Died 30 May 2012, aged 94. Sir Andrew Huxley, shown in his laboratory in Fig. 1, was a giant among modern physiologists, pioneering the fields of nerve conduction, and skeletal muscle activation and tension generation.

  6. Sir Andrew Fielding Huxley, English physiologist, shared the 1963 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine with two other physiologists, John Eccles (1903- ) and Allan Hodgkin (1914- ), for their discoveries of the ionic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition in the peripheral and central portions of the nerve cell membrane.

  7. Julia Huxley died young. Leonard subsequently married Rosalind Bruce and they had two sons, David and Andrew. Andrew was born in 1917. Andrew does not seem to have been much influenced by his famous half-brothers; because of the age difference, he said, ‘they were more like uncles than brothers’ (Collins 2015).