B²FH paper
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B²FH paper
Summary
B²FH paper is a scholarly article[1]. It draws 107 Wikipedia views per month (scholarly_article category, ranking #11 of 21).[2]
Key Facts
- B²FH paper authored Geoffrey Burbidge[3].
- B²FH paper authored William Alfred Fowler[4].
- B²FH paper authored Fred Hoyle[5].
- B²FH paper authored Margaret Burbidge[6].
- B²FH paper's instance of is recorded as scholarly article[7].
- Margaret Burbidge is named after B²FH paper[8].
- Fred Hoyle is named after B²FH paper[9].
- Geoffrey Burbidge is named after B²FH paper[10].
- William Alfred Fowler is named after B²FH paper[11].
- B²FH paper's page is recorded as 547-650[12].
- B²FH paper's DOI is recorded as 10.1103/REVMODPHYS.29.547[13].
- B²FH paper's language of work or name is recorded as English[14].
- B²FH paper's issue is recorded as 4[15].
- B²FH paper's volume is recorded as 29[16].
- B²FH paper's publication date is recorded as +1957-10-01T00:00:00Z[17].
- B²FH paper's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02v_2zh[18].
- B²FH paper's ADS bibcode is recorded as 1957RvMP...29..547B[19].
- B²FH paper's main subject is recorded as stellar nucleosynthesis[20].
- B²FH paper's main subject is recorded as abundance of the chemical elements[21].
- B²FH paper's published in is recorded as Reviews of Modern Physics[22].
- B²FH paper's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Synthesis of the Elements in Stars'}[23].
- B²FH paper's cites work is recorded as The Mechanism of Nuclear Fission[24].
- B²FH paper's cites work is recorded as Zur Theorie der Kernmassen[25].
- B²FH paper's cites work is recorded as The Spectra of the Bright Stars of Types F5-K5[26].
- B²FH paper's cites work is recorded as Time Interval between Nucleogenesis and the Formation of Meteorites[27].
Body
Designation and Status
B²FH paper's instance of is recorded as scholarly article[7].
History and Context
Things named after include Margaret Burbidge[8], an astronomer[28], 1919–2020[29], of United Kingdom[30], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society[31], specialised in astrophysics[32]; Fred Hoyle[9], a screenwriter[33], 1915–2001[34], of United Kingdom[35], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society[36], specialised in astronomy[37]; Geoffrey Burbidge[10], an astronomer[38], 1925–2010[39], of United Kingdom[40], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society[41], specialised in astronomy[42]; and William Alfred Fowler[11], an astronomer[43], 1911–1995[44], of United States[45], awarded the Knight of the Legion of Honour[46], specialised in astrophysics[47].
Why It Matters
B²FH paper draws 107 Wikipedia views per month (scholarly_article category, ranking #11 of 21).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[48]