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  1. Raymond George Gosling (15 July 1926 – 18 May 2015) was a British scientist. While a PhD student at King's College, London he worked under the supervision of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin.

  2. Apr 25, 2013 · On April 25th 1953, three publications in Nature forever changed the face of the life sciences in reporting the structure of DNA. Sixty years later, Raymond Gosling shares his memories of the race to the double helix.

  3. Raymond George Gosling was a British scientist. While a PhD student at King's College, London he worked under the supervision of Rosalind Franklin. He helped to perfect the technique of x-ray diffraction photography to obtain the A and B form images of DNA.

  4. www.nature.com › articles › d41586/019/02554-zThe structure of DNA

    Oct 9, 2019 · She and her graduate student, Raymond Gosling, had given Wilkins a photograph of the X-ray-diffraction pattern produced by the B form of DNA.

  5. Jul 9, 2015 · A pioneer in X-ray diffraction photography, Raymond Gosling captured some of the world's arguably most crucial images. They revealed the structure of DNA, enabling James Watson and...

  6. May 22, 2015 · Professor Raymond Gosling, who has died aged 88, was the often overlooked fifth person in the story of the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA – the key to the secret of life.

  7. Raymond Gosling arrived at Kings lab in 1949 to work as a research student. Under the direction of Rosalind Franklin, he helped to perfect the technique of x-ray diffraction photography to obtain the A and B form images of DNA.

  8. Gosling pioneered x-ray diffraction research at King's and collaborated closely with Maurice Wilkins in analysing samples of DNA that the two men prepared by hydrating and drawing out into spider's-web filaments and photographing in a hydrogen atmosphere. Raymond Gosling, 2003 Together they produced the first crystalline diffraction photographs ...

  9. Raymond Gosling arrived at Kings lab in 1949 to work as a research student. Under the direction of Rosalind Franklin, he helped to perfect the technique of x-ray diffraction photography to obtain the A and B form images of DNA.

  10. Raymond Gosling (15 July 1926 – 18 May 2015) was a British biophysicist. He was known for doing X-ray diffraction studies on DNA. These studies were the first step in understanding the 3-D structure of DNA.

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