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         Alvarez Luis W:     more detail
  1. Alvarez: Adventures of a Physicist (Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Series) by Luis W. Alvarez, 1989-05
  2. Luis W. Alvarez (Raintree Hispanic Stories) by Corinn Codye, 1989-11
  3. Discovering Alvarez: Selected Works of Luis W. Alvarez with Commentary by His Students and Colleagues by W. Peter Trower, 1987-12-30
  4. Alvarez by Luis W Alvarez, 1987-01-01
  5. Experimental evidence that an asteroid impact led to the extinction of many species 65 million years ago (NTIS Accession no. DE83-001359) by Luis W Alvarez, 1983
  6. Notes on radioactivity and nuclear structure, Physics 124 by Luis W Alvarez, 1950
  7. LUIS W. ALVAREZ
  8. Discovering Alavarez: Selected Works of Luis W. Alvarez, With Commenta by W Peter ed. TROWER, 1987
  9. Luis Alvarez: Wild Idea Man (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Inventors and Scientists) by Mike Venezia, 2010-03
  10. Luis Alvarez and the Development of the Bubble Chamber (Unlocking the Secrets of Science) by Amy Allison, 2002-08
  11. Luis Walter Álvarez (Hispanic-American Biographies) by Tina Randall, 2005-09-15
  12. Luis Walter Álvarez (Biografias Hispanoamericanas / Hispanic-American Biographies (Spanish)) (Spanish Edition) by Tina Randall, 2005-09-15
  13. ALVAREZ, LUIS (1911-1988): An entry from Gale's <i>World of Earth Science</i>
  14. Luis Walter Alvarez: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Leslie Hutchinson, 2001

21. | Luis Alvarez | Luis Royo | Luis Miguel | Luis Pangilinan | Luis ..
luis W. alvarez Winner of the 1968 nobel Prize in Physics luis W. alvarez, anobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobel Prize Internet Archive.
http://30d98.hjlk.com/chnl0.asp?keywords=Luis Alvarez

22. Nat'l Academies Press, Memorial Tributes: (1992), Luis W. Alvarez
of Science in 1964, the Michelson Award in 1965, the nobel Prize in available ina recent book subtitled Selected Works of luis W. alvarez, with Commentary
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309046890/html/7.html
Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering, Volume 5
National Academy of Engineering ( NAE
Related Books

CHAPTER SELECTOR:
Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Contents, pp. v-xii Memorial Tributes, pp. 1-2 Herbert Allen, pp. 3-6 Luis W. Alvarez, pp. 7-14 Arsham Amirikian, pp. 15-18 James Bliss Austin, pp. 19-22 Roy Bainer, pp. 23-26 William B. Bergen, pp. 27-32 James Boyd, pp. 33-36 Roy W. Carlson, pp. 37-40 Leo Casagrande, pp. 41-46 Carl Covalt Chambers, pp. 47-50 Arthur A. Collins, pp. 51-56 Thomas W. Dakin, pp. 57-60 Richard W. Damon, pp. 61-68 Duncan S. Davies, pp. 69-74 Richard D. DeLauer, pp. 75-80 Jacob Pieter Den Hartog, pp. 81-86 Joseph K. Dillard, pp. 87-92 Charles W. Elston, pp. 93-98 Mars G. Fontana, pp. 99-104 Michael L. Haider, pp. 105-108 Paul D. Haney, pp. 109-114 Raymond J. Hodge, pp. 115-118 George Edward Holbrook, pp. 119-122 J. Herbert Hollomon, pp. 123-128 Raymond W. Ketchledge, pp. 129-132 Garbis Hvannes Keulegan, pp. 133-138 James R. Killian, Jr., pp. 139-144 August Uno Lamm, pp. 145-152 Helmut E. Landsberg, pp. 153-158

23. NERSC Seeking Applicants For Alvarez Post-Doctoral Fellowship
The fellowship is named for Dr. luis W. alvarez, the nobel Laureate andphysicist who worked at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
http://www.npaci.edu/online/v7.1/nersc.app.html
NERSC Seeking Applicants for Alvarez Post-Doctoral Fellowship
Deadline for applications is March 3
BERKELEY, Calif. The U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is now accepting applications for the Luis W. Alvarez Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Computational Science. The deadline for applications for the coming academic year is Monday, March 3, 2003. The fellowship, sponsored by the Computational Research and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing (NERSC) Center divisions at Berkeley Lab, was established to encourage the development and application of tools to advance scientific research. NERSC is an NPACI Associate Partner. The fellowship enables a recent graduate with a Ph.D. (or equivalent) to acquire further scientific training and to develop professional maturity for independent research. Applicants must be recent graduates (within the past four years) with a strong emphasis on computing or computational science. The Alvarez Fellowship is offered as a one-year term appointment with the possibility of a one-year renewal. The successful applicant will be compensated with a competitive salary and excellent benefits. Additionally, the successful candidate will have access to the NERSC Center's high-performance computing resources. The successful applicant is expected to be involved in one of the areas that currently have post-doctoral openings, and will be assigned a scientific mentor. For more information on the Luis W. Alvarez Post-Doctoral Fellowship, please refer to

24. Department Of Energy's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center Invi
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1 Cyclotron Road, MS 50B4230 Berkeley, CA94720 The fellowship is named for Dr. luis W. alvarez, the nobel Laureate and
http://www.npaci.edu/online/v5.1/alvarez.html
Volume V Issue 1 - January 10, 2001
Department of Energy's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center Invites Applications for Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship
For more information on the Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship, please refer to www.nersc.gov/research/alvarez.html. For currently available postdoctoral openings, please see www.lbl/gov/CS/Careers/CJO-NERSC.html.
Applications are due by April 1, 2001, for an appointment to coincide with the coming academic year. Interested applicants should submit a letter of application, resume and three letters of reference by email to Diane Heim (DMHeim@lbl.gov) or by standard mail to: D Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship
c/o Diane Heim
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
1 Cyclotron Road, MS 50B-4230
Berkeley, CA 94720
The fellowship is named for Dr. Luis W. Alvarez, the Nobel Laureate and physicist who worked at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. In the 1950s, Dr. Alvarez opened a new era in high-energy physics research with his proposal to build a pressurized chamber filled with liquid hydrogen. Known as a "bubble chamber," this device would allow scientists to discover new particles and analyze their behavior. In his 1955 prospectus for such an experimental facility, Dr. Alvarez became one of the first scientists to propose using computing devices for analyzing experimental data, even before such computers were actually available.
"NERSC is proud to offer the Luis W. Alvarez Fellowship in Computational Science as another means of helping educate the next generation of computational scientists," said NERSC Director Horst Simon. "We encourage those who share Dr. Alvarez’ scientific curiosity and dedication to join us in our efforts."

25. NERSC's Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship In
The fellowship is named for Dr. luis W. alvarez, a nobel laureate and physicistwho worked at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and was one of the first
http://www.csc.fi/math_topics/Mail/NANET00-4/msg00017.html
Message Prev Message Next Message Index
NERSC's Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship in
  • Subject : NERSC's Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship in From EGNg@lbl.gov
http://www.nersc.gov/research/alvarez.html . Applications for the fellowship are due by January 31, 2001, for an appointment to coincide with the coming academic year. Interested applicants should submit a letter of application, resume, and three letters of reference by email to Chris Diesch (CDiesch@lbl.gov). -

26. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship At NERSC
Dr. luis W. alvarez, a nobel laureate and physicist who worked at LBNL, wasa pioneer in using computing devices for analyzing experimental data.
http://www.csc.fi/math_topics/Mail/NANET00-4/msg00243.html
Message Prev Message Next Message Index
Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship at NERSC
  • Subject : Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship at NERSC From EGNg@lbl.gov Date : Mon, 11 Dec 2000 14:25:13 -0800
http://www.nersc.gov/research/alvarez.html . Applications for the fellowship are due by January 31, 2001, for an appointment to coincide with the coming academic year. Interested applicants should submit a letter of application, resume, and three letters of reference by email to Chris Diesch (CDiesch@lbl.gov).

27. Science News Online 75th Anniversary Essay
alvarez, together with his father, nobel prizewinning physicist luis W. alvarez,and two other researchers at the University of California, Berkeley
http://www.sciencenews.org/sn_arc97/75th/rm_essay.htm
75th Anniversary Mug Anniversary Index Home Page
The Call of Catastrophes
By RICHARD MONASTERSKY I n the fall of 1973, a young geologist named Walter Alvarez explored a limestone gorge just outside the medieval walls of Gubbio, Italy. Chipping away at the layers of rock with his hammer, Alvarez stumbled onto something that would revolutionize how scientists view our planet and the history of life. Alvarez, together with his father, Nobel prizewinning physicist Luis W. Alvarez, and two other researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, discovered a pencil-thin layer of clay containing unearthly amounts of the element iridium. In 1980, the team interpreted the iridium layer as evidence that a huge comet or meteorite slammed into Earth 65 million years ago with a strength 10,000 times the explosive power of the global nuclear arsenal. This planetary concussion, posited the scientists, offered the long-sought explanation for the disappearance of the dinosaurs and many other animals at the end of Earth's Cretaceous period. The Berkeley team's work focused unprecedented attention on events at the close of the Cretaceous, making this distant time one of the best-studied moments in Earth's history. William Glen, a geophysicist and historian who has tracked the impact debate, counted more than 2,500 papers and books published on the topic by 1993. In terms of its influence on future science, Glen ranks the impact hypothesis even above that of the plate tectonics revolution of the 1960s.

28. MAINSTREAM Reading Course ŠÖ˜AƒTƒCƒg
in San Francisco, who won the 1968 nobel Prize in gamow/george/1985bio.html BiographicalInformation for luis W. and Walter alvarez luis W. and Walter
http://www.zoshindo.co.jp/Ms_Ns/MsRlink.htm
@‚P‚V‚V@‘i“°^‚l‚`‚h‚m‚r‚s‚q‚d‚`‚l READING COURSE ŠÖ˜A‚r‚h‚s‚d ‚k‚h‚m‚j
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MAINSTREAM NEW STREAM ‚Z‹³‰È‘‚²ˆÄ“à‚Ö–ß‚é
Second Edition (‰p R 689)
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œ Lesson @‚P ^ Get Biking
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^ Kaleidoscopic Australia
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^ The Forests of the Deep
œ Lesson ‚P‚P
^ The Last March
@@@@ The Life and Death of Janusz Korczak
œ Lesson ‚P‚R
^ The Day the dinosaurs Disappeared
œ Lesson ‚P ^ Get Biking
http://www.natenergy.org.uk/ National Energy Foundation based at Milton Keynes in the UK: The National Energy Foundation in Milton Keynes is a leading UK charity for energy efficiency, renewable energy and energy accreditation.
œ Lesson ‚T ^ What Kids Wants and Need to Know about AIDS
http://www.hokenkai.or.jp http://www.unaids.org/ UNAIDS (The Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS)‚̃z[ƒ€ƒy[ƒWB
œ Lesson ‚U ^ Audrey Hepburn and UNICEF
http://www.unicef.org/

29. Chucara
Translate this page luis W. alvarez, un brillant physicien lauréat du prix nobel qui a participéau développement de la bombe atomique et a aidé à élaborer une théorie
http://www.chucara.com/bio/alvarez.html
Luis W. Alvarez

30. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Nobel Laureates
About Sigma Xi » Overview » nobel Laureates Mayer 1965 Richard P. Feynman 1965 JulianS. Schwinger 1967 Hans A. Bethe 1968 luis W. alvarez 1969 Murray Gell
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/overview/nobel.shtml
Overview Leadership Organization News ... Contact Us About: Overview
Overview
Physics
1907 Albert Michelson
1921 Albert Einstein
1923 Robert A. Millikan
1925 James Franck
1927 Arthur H. Compton
1936 Carl D. Anderson
1937 Clinton J. Davisson 1938 Enrico Fermi 1939 Ernest O. Lawrence 1943 Otto Stern 1944 Isidor Isaac Rabi 1945 Wolfgang Pauli 1946 Percy Williams Bridgman 1952 Felix Bloch 1952 Edward M. Purcell 1955 Polykarp Kusch 1955 Willis E. Lamb, Jr. 1956 John Bardeen 1956 Walter H. Brattain 1956 William Shockley 1957 Chen Ning Yang 1958 Igor Y. Tamm 1959 Owen Chamberlain 1959 Emilio G. Segre 1960 Donald A. Glaser 1961 Robert Hofstadter 1963 Eugene P. Wigner

31. Alvarez
alvarez, luis W(alter) (szül. 1911. Munkássága során számos ún. instabil elemirészecskét fedezett fel, részben ezekért kapott nobeldíjat 1968-ban.
http://www.kfki.hu/~cheminfo/hun/olvaso/bh/bh4/alvarez.html

32. MIT Nobel Prize Winners
Eight from MIT win 2001 nobels in 5 fields MIT news release, October 12, 2001;Theses of MIT Alumni nobel Prize Winners luis W. alvarez, Physics, head
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/nobels.html

Special Reports
News Releases Search MIT News Office ... MIT
56 MIT-related Nobel Prize winners
include faculty, researchers, alumni and staff
UPDATED OCTOBER 7, 2002
Contact Information

Fifty-six current or former members of the MIT community have won the Nobel Prize . They include 22 professors, 23 alumni (including three of the professors), 13 researchers and one staff physician. Twenty-five of the Nobel Prizes are in physics, ten in chemistry, eleven in economics, eight in medicine/physiology, and two in peace. Eight Nobel prizes were won by researchers who helped develop radar at the MIT Radiation Laboratory. Nobelists who are current members of the MIT community are Drs. Horvitz (2002), Ketterle (2001), Molina (1995), Sharp (1993), Friedman (1990), Tonegawa (1987), Solow (1987), Modigliani (1985), Ting (1976) Samuelson (1970), and Khorana (1968). H. Robert Horvitz

33. Awards And Honors: Nobel Prize
Radiation Laboratory 8 alvarez, luis W. (deceased) Physics, 1968; Bethe, HansA
http://web.mit.edu/ir/pop/awards/nobel.shtml
P OPULATION A WARDS AND ... ONORS O FFICE OF THE P ROVOST
Provost Home

Institutional Research
Awards and Honors American Academy of Arts and Sciences American Association for the Advancement of Science CAREER Award John Bates Clark Medal Crafoord Prize Dirac Medal Franklin Institute Awards Fulbright Scholars Program Gairdner Award Gregori Aminoff Prize Guggenheim Fellows HHMI Investigators Institute of Medicine Japan Prize Kyoto Prize Lemelson-MIT Awards MacArthur Fellows NAE NAS National Book Award National Medal of Science National Medal of Technology
Nobel Prize Pulitzer Prize Alan T. Waterman Award -Student Honors- Fulbright Fellows Marshall Scholars Rhodes Scholars -MIT Only- Levitan Prize Nobel Prize Nobel Foundation Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Current faculty: 7

34. Luis Alvarez
luis W. alvarez was born in San Francisco, Calif., on June 13 Professor alvarez isa member of the following societies From nobel Lectures, Physics 19631970.
http://www.childrenofthemanhattanproject.org/HF/Biographies - Men/alvarez.htm
Manhattan Project Hall of Fame
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1968
"for his decisive contributions to elementary particle physics, in particular the discovery of a large number of resonance states, made possible through his development of the technique of using hydrogen bubble chamber and data analysis" Luis Walter Alvarez USA University of California
Berkeley, CA, USA
LUIS WALTER ALVAREZ
Group Leader - Detonation Project "Y"
Luis W. Alvarez
was born in San Francisco, Calif., on June 13, 1911. He received his B. Sc. from the University of Chicago in 1932, a M. Sc. in 1934, and his Ph. D. in 1936. Dr. Alvarez joined the Radiation Laboratory of the University of California, where he is now a professor, as a research fellow in 1936. He was on leave at the Radiation Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1940 to 1943, at the Metallurgical Laboratory of the University of Chicago in 1943-1944, and at the Los Alamos Laboratory of the Manhattan District from 1944 to 1945.
Early in his scientific career, Dr. Alvarez worked concurrently in the fields of optics and cosmic rays. He is co-discoverer of the "East-West effect" in cosmic rays. For several years he concentrated his work in the field of nuclear physics. In 1937 he gave the first experimental demonstration of the existence of the phenomenon of

35. Nobel Laureates Gallery
nobel Prize 1965, nobel Prize - 1967, nobel Prize - 1968, nobel Prize - 1975,nobel Prize - 1975. Julian Schwinger. Hans A. Bethe, luis W. alvarez. Aage NielsBohr,
http://www.childrenofthemanhattanproject.org/HF/nobel_gallery.htm
Manhattan Project Hall of Fame
Nobel Laureates Gallery Nobel Prize in Physics or Chemistry . "Click" on the photo for a complete biography of the scientist. Nobel Prize - 1921 Nobel Prize - 1922 Nobel Prize - 1927 Nobel Prize - 1935 Nobel Prize - 1938 Albert Einstein Niels H. Bohr Arthur H. Compton James Chadwick Enrico Fermi Nobel Prize - 1939 Nobel Prize - 1944 Nobel Prize - 1959 Nobel Prize - 1959 Nobel Prize - 1965 Ernest O. Lawrence Isidore I. Rabi Emilio G. Segre Owen Chamberlain Richard P. Feynman Nobel Prize - 1965 Nobel Prize - 1967 Nobel Prize - 1968 Nobel Prize - 1975 Nobel Prize - 1975 Julian Schwinger Hans A. Bethe Luis W. Alvarez Aage Niels Bohr Leo J. Rainwater Nobel Prize - 1963 Nobel Prize - 1925 Nobel Prize - 1934 Nobel Prize - 1951 Nobel Prize - 1951 Eugene Paul Wigner James Franck Harold Clayton Urey Glenn Theodore Seaborg Edwin Mattison McMillan Nobel Prize - 1989 Norman Ramsey We are adding new material each and every month. Be one of the first to know! Join the Manhattan Project Heritage Preservation Assoc., Inc.

36. PostdocJobs.com - LUIS ALVAREZ POSTDOC FELLOWSHIP
This effort led to Dr. alvarez receiving the nobel Prize for Physics in 1968. TheLuis W. alvarez Fellowship in Computational Science aims to achieve these
http://www.postdocjobs.com/jobs/302854.shtml
Job Seekers Search Jobs Post Resume Job Email Search Fellowships ... Member Login UC LAWRENCE BERKELEY NTL LAB Job Title:
LUIS ALVAREZ POSTDOC FELLOWSHIP Posting Number: Date Posted: Job Description:
Luis W. Alvarez Postdoctoral Fellowship in Computational Science
Job CR/15425/WCS
The U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC)and Computational Research Division at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory provides high-performance computing tools and expertise that enable computational science of scale, in which large, interdisciplinary teams of scientists attack fundamental problems in science and engineering that require massive calculations and have broad scientific and economic impacts.
In the 1950s, physicist Dr. Alvarez opened a new era in high-energy physics research with his proposal to build a pressurized chamber filled with liquid hydrogen. Known
as a "bubble chamber," this device would allow scientists to discover new particles and analyze their behavior. In his 1955 prospectus for such an experimental facility, Dr. Alvarez became one of the first scientists to propose using computing devices for analyzing experimental data, even before such computers were actually available.

37. WIEM: Alvarez Luis Walter
(encyklopedia.pl)Category World Polska Leksykon Encyklopedia encyklopedia.pl A...... alvarez luis Walter (19111988), wybitny fizyk amerykanski, uczestnik programubadan nad bronia jadrowa Odwiedz w Internecie. The nobel Foundation.
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/01123f.html
wiem.onet.pl napisz do nas losuj: has³a multimedia Fizyka, Stany Zjednoczone
Alvarez Luis Walter widok strony
znajd¼ podobne

poka¿ powi±zane
Alvarez Luis Walter Alvarez Luis Walter (1911-1988), wybitny fizyk amerykañski, uczestnik programu badañ nad broni± j±drow± - Manhattan Project . Laureat Nagrody Nobla w 1968 za prace po¶wiêcone cz±stkom elementarnym (rezonansowym) i skonstruowanie pó³automatycznej komory pêcherzykowej . W 1981 wraz ze swoim synem Walterem og³osi³ teoriê, i¿ przyczyn± zag³ady dinozaurów by³ upadek na Ziemiê ogromnego meteorytu. Odwied¼ w Internecie The Nobel Foundation Powi±zania Wychwyt elektronu Nobla Nagrody, 1966-1970 Bloch Felix Manhattan Project ... do góry Encyklopedia zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra

38. The Scientist - Nobel Laureate Luis Alvarez Dies At 77; Noted For Diverse Career
Physicist luis Walter alvarez, a age 77, lost a long But there was another, lesserknown side to alvarez. patience in explaining things,” adds W. Peter Trower
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1988/oct/people2_p25_881003.html
The Scientist 2[18]:25, Oct. 03, 1988
News
Nobel Laureate Luis Alvarez Dies at 77; Noted For Diverse Career And Controversial Theories
By Bruce Fellman Date: October 03, 1988 Physicist Luis Walter Alvarez, a age 77, lost a long battle with can cer on September 1,1988—and the scientific community lost one of it most creative and feisty members Luie, as he was known by colleagues and castigators alike, won numerous awards, including the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1968 for his work in developing, and experimenting with, the hydrogen bubble chamber a device used to track the paths of, and thus identify, elementary particles. But long before that he bad been a key member of the Manhattan Project, working to develop the atomic bomb. And two decades after he received sciences most prestigious award—indeed almost to the day he died—he was at the center of a major scientific controversy (see story below) over the precise cause of the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Two traits help explain why Alvarez had such a long, rich, and unusually diverse career—the twin abilities to tinker and to discover. The physicist, who began a lifelong association with the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and the University of California, Berkeley, after receiving his doctorate from the University of Chicago in 1936, held 40 US. patents and was elected into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1978.

39. The Scientist - Shootout At The K/T Boundary
to deliver a sermon— well, a paper actually—that would take on one of the exaltedamong his priesthood—the redoubtable nobel laureate luis W. alvarez.
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1988/oct/profession5_p25_881003.html
The Scientist 2[18]:25, Oct. 03, 1988
Profile
Shootout At The K/T Boundary
By Bruce Fellman Date: October 03, 1988 Several years ago, paleontologist Dewey M. McLean stepped to the podium at a conference on the climatological effects of volcanoes. The silver-haired professor from the Virginia Polytechnic Institute looked out over the packed house like a pastor surveying his flock. He was about to deliver a sermon— well, a paper actually—that would take on one of the exalted among his priesthood—the redoubtable Nobel laureate Luis W. Alvarez. Specifically, McLean was about to challenge Alvarez’s well-publicized theory that an asteroid had caused the extinction of the dinosaurs and thousands of other species 65 million years ago. The real angel of death, he would argue, was a “greenhouse effect” caused by intense volcanic activity. The audience of scientists was looking forward to the talk; most of them were fellow heretics. But before McLean could begin, something started roaring outside the auditorium. The noise grew quickly, and as it reached near-deafening dimensions, McLean looked heavenward smiled, and said to the assembled multitude, “Here it comes.” Everyone laughed. It was only a torrential downpour. Even Alvarez, for all his supposed power, couldn’t order an asteroid to conveniently squash opposition to his controversial theory. Still, there was a touch of nervousness to the audience’s laughter. At the time, there were dark rumors circulating that Alvarez would stop at nothing to stifle dissent. Even now, a number of vocal critics of the asteroid-impact theory are firmly convinced that the late Nobel laureate was pulling strings behind the scenes—and that the price of hewing to what they perceive as the scientific truth was loss of access to news coverage, grant money, the leading journals, and even tenure.

40. An Early History Of LBNL By Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg
Discovery of electron capture decay by luis W. alvarez is a picture taken in 1938of luis alvarez with Robert alvarez receives the nobel Prize for Physics from
http://www-itg.lbl.gov/Seaborg.talks/65th-anniv/18.html
The Scientists I thought I should say something special about Luis Alvarez because he was an extraordinary scientist at this time. He joined the Laboratory in 1936. Alvarez with personally built electronics and BF-3 ionization chamber Glenn T. Seaborg journal excerpt, April 15, 1938. Discovery of electron capture decay by Luis W. Alvarez. Four future presidents of the American Physical Society. Left to right: Alvarez, Robert Oppenheimer, Willy Fowler and Bob Serber (1938) Here's a picture of him with a neutron counter taken in 1938. He is responsible for a large number of discoveries.Here is a note from my journal of April 15, 1938. I've kept a journal since January 1, 1927. Here is my description of a paper I had just read in which he discovered decay by electron capture. He is the discoverer of that method of decay. Here is a picture taken in 1938 of Luis Alvarez with Robert Oppenheimer, Willie Fowler of Cal Tech, and Bob Serber of the Radiation Lab at that time.
Alvarez receives the Nobel Prize for Physics from King Gustav VI with Princess Christina looking on (1968). Asteroid Impact research team (1969). Left to right: Helen Michel, Frank Asaro, Walter Alvarez and Luis Alvarez.

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