Dear Colleagues,


it is with a heavy heart, that we must announce the passing of George
Michael Sheldrick.

Everyone in crystallography knows George as a giant in the development of
computing methods despite his unassuming manner. His SHELX programs for
structure solution and refinement have shaped the field and their use has
been key to innumerable projects. The same is valid for his contribution to
data processing and analysis in the programs he wrote for Bruker detectors.
Only those young to crystallography will have missed that while typically
our papers are scored by the impact factor of a journal, one paper of
George rocketed the impact factor of the journal Acta Crystallographica A
from 2.05 to 54, surpassing that of Science, Nature or Cell in the year
2010. This establishes how many scientific projects must have been aided by
George´s insightful work and bright solutions.

Those of us who have had the privilege to meet George in person also know
him for his passion for problem solving, originality, sense of humour and
deep humanity.



George has touched the lives and careers of so many group members,
providing a work environment that was simultaneously sheltered and free. He
was always receptive to our ideas, encouraging our independence, providing
the means to support them and giving us credit for what we accomplished. At
the same time, we were spared the financial worries or conflicts attached
to any institute. If Goethe was right in writing that character is built in
the tempest of life while talent requires the calm, George shaped the
optimal environment to develop our talents. An unusual trait of George is
that he always pondered what people said, not who said it. Experience shows
that humans are more ready to value what their friends, allies and
referents state as being correct and search for reasons why their
competition must be wrong! This lack of prejudice may explain why George´s
research group was always most diverse: he gave everyone fair opportunities.

In lectures, talks or conversations, George would explain complicated
concepts making them come across as compellingly simple. His teaching would
always prompt critical thinking, as when he faked a nuclear explosion
producing a mushroom in his chemistry lecture with experiments. This was
the 80´s and half of the audience started an *im promptu *demonstration
against nuclear power before being absorbed in the debate of why this was
impossible and the analysis of what experiment had really taken place.

Working with George was inspiring and fun, it covered a broad range of
interests in chemistry, geology and biology evolving along the years. In
Cambridge and Göttingen, George closely supervised more than a hundred
theses. Former students and co-workers would frequently stop in Göttingen
and pop up to join the coffee time, where daily group discussions would
take place. Many of us have kept in touch ever since, resorted to him for
advice or just for the pleasure of discussing science and puzzling problems.

George Sheldrick will be missed.

Regine Herbst-Irmer and Isabel Usón

If you would like to express your condolences to George´s family, please
use the following email address: a.sheldr...@gmx.de


-- 
ICREA Res. Prof. Isabel Usón
Crystallographic Methods
Department of Structural and Molecular Biology,
Molecular Biology Institute of Barcelona, Spanish Research Council;
Barcelona Science Park, Helix Building, 08028 Barcelona (Spain)
http://chango.ibmb.csic.es/ARCIMBOLDO
http://shelx.uni-goettingen.de

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