Rosalind Franklin drew a picture of a DNA molecule and it does not like similar to Watson and Crick's DNA diagram. Rosalind Franklin was smarter than them. It was used to determine the physical structure of DNA.
James Watson (L) and Francis Crick (R),and the model they built of the structure of DNA.
He did the exact same thing that James Watson did. He used the work of Rosalind Franklin to discover it. He and Crick were given credit not Rosalind Franklin. They found out the structure of DNA (the double helix).
Rosalind Franklin was an expert in x-ray crystallography who is famous for her x-ray diffraction images of DNA. Watson and Crick, who are commonly credited with the discovery of the structure of DNA, have admitted that Franklin's data played an integral part in their discovery of the double helix model of DNA. Watson, Crick, and Wilkins jointly received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962 but since this was after Franklin's death, it is often assumed that Franklin would have also shared the prize is she had lived.
Watson, Crick, Wilkins and Franklin ( died and therefore not recognised for the Nobel prize)
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double helix
Watson and Crick
Rosalind Franklin drew a picture of a DNA molecule and it does not like similar to Watson and Crick's DNA diagram. Rosalind Franklin was smarter than them. It was used to determine the physical structure of DNA.
James Watson (L) and Francis Crick (R),and the model they built of the structure of DNA.
He did the exact same thing that James Watson did. He used the work of Rosalind Franklin to discover it. He and Crick were given credit not Rosalind Franklin. They found out the structure of DNA (the double helix).
Rosalind Franklin was an expert in x-ray crystallography who is famous for her x-ray diffraction images of DNA. Watson and Crick, who are commonly credited with the discovery of the structure of DNA, have admitted that Franklin's data played an integral part in their discovery of the double helix model of DNA. Watson, Crick, and Wilkins jointly received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962 but since this was after Franklin's death, it is often assumed that Franklin would have also shared the prize is she had lived.
While Crick, Wilkins and Franklin all used X-ray diffraction to try and decipher the molecule of DNA the best work was done by Rosalind Franklin with here B-51 diffraction " picture " of the double helix.
Rosalind Franklin
Rosalind Franklin used x-ray crystalography to receive pictures of the DNA Crick and Watson then used the photo to determine that that the structure of DNA was a double helix
Watson, Crick, Wilkins and Franklin ( died and therefore not recognised for the Nobel prize)