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Intro | American chemist | |
A.K.A. | Barbara S. Askins | |
A.K.A. | Barbara S. Askins | |
Places | United States of America | |
is | Chemist Inventor | |
Work field | Business Science | |
Gender |
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Birth | 1939, Belfast, United States of America | |
Age | 86 years |
Biography
Barbara S. Askins (born 1939) was an American chemist. She was best known for her invention of a method to enhance underexposed photographic negatives. This development was used extensively by NASA and the medical industry, and it earned Askins the title of National Inventor of the Year in 1978.
Early years, education and early career
Barbara Askins is an inventor who was born in 1926 and died in 2002. She invented photographic positives and work for N.A.S.A nobody cared for her invention (because she was a woman) until 1945 when her husband presented the project as his own. Barbara divorced him and got her credit, finally, in 1964 when her (ex)hubbie gave all of the money he earned for the invention to her and died in 1967. ;Di
Research career
Askins is a physical chemist who worked for NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center and is best known for her pioneering invention of a process in which "images on developed photographic emulsions can be significantly intensified by making the image silver radioactive and exposing a second emulsion to this radiation." The resulting print, known as an autoradiograph, reproduces the image with significant increases in density and contrast. Her groundbreaking method enhanced underexposed emulsions and increased the limits of photographic detection. In short, it made visible the invisible in photos that would otherwise have been useless. This was very useful for a number of applications, including the coaxing of data from underexposed space images—such as those peering deep into space as well as those highlighting the geology of other bodies in our solar system.
Askins' invention also led to significant advances in the field of medical technology. In particular, Askins' method prompted improvements in the development of X-ray images. Medical images that were 96 percent underexposed suddenly become readable; this meant that doctors could dramatically decrease the amount of X-ray radiation they gave to patients when running routine or emergency tests. Askins' process was also later used in the restoration of old photographs. Askins patented her invention in 1978 (U.S. patent No. 4,101,780), and NASA employed it extensively for its research and development work.
Awards and professional memberships
In 1978, the Association for Advancement of Inventions and Innovations named Askins the National Inventor of the Year. She was the first individual woman to earn this honor.
Askins is a member of the American Chemical Society, the Sigma Xi honorary research Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the World Future Society.