Mass spectrometry timeline

From Mass Spec Terms

19th Century

1886
Eugen Goldstein [1] observes canal rays.
1898
Wilhelm Wien [2] demonstrates that canal rays can be deflected using strong electric and magnetic fields.

20th Century

1905
J. J. Thomson [3] begins his study of positive rays.[4]
1919
Francis Aston [5] constructs the first velocity focusing mass spectrograph with mass resolving power of 130 (Aston, F. W. A positive-ray spectrograph. Phil. Mag. 1919, 38, 707-715).
1922
Francis Aston [6] is awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry "for his discovery, by means of his mass spectrograph, of isotopes, in a large number of non-radioactive elements, and for his enunciation of the whole-number rule."

21st Century

2002
John Fenn [7] and Koichi Tanaka [8] are awarded one-quarter of the Nobel Prize in chemistry each "for the development of soft desorption ionisation methods ... for mass spectrometric analyses of biological macromolecules."

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