Mária Telkes was a Hungarian-American biophysicist, scientist, and inventor. Mária Telkes never had any kids.
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Maria Telkes specialized in creating devices that store energy captured from sunlight. Telkes received a number of honors during her career.
Telkes invented one of her most important inventions during World War II (1939-45): a device that used solar power to make seawater drinkable. The system was carried on life rafts and saved many sailors and airmen’s lives.

Credit: https://alltogether.swe.org
Telkes assisted in the design and construction of the world’s first modern house heated by solar energy.
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She assisted in the development of the world’s first solar-electric residence, which was built in Carlisle, Massachusetts, in 1980. Telkes worked on solar-energy applications right up until the end of her career.
Telkes retired in 1977.Maria Telkes was the first woman to receive the Society of Women Engineers Achievement Award in 1952.
She was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2012. Telkes passed away on December 2, 1995, in Budapest.


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