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         Laughlin Robert B:     more books (26)
  1. A Different Universe: Reinventing Physics from the Bottom Down by Robert B. Laughlin, 2005-03-01
  2. The Crime of Reason: And the Closing of the Scientific Mind by Robert B. Laughlin, 2008-09-23
  3. Different Universe Reinventing Physics From the B by Robert B Laughlin, 2005-01-01
  4. Geist und Materie by Robert B. Laughlin, 2008
  5. Biography - Laughlin, Robert B. (1950-): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2007-01-01
  6. Das Verbrechen der Vernunft: Betrug an der Wissensgesellschaft (edition unseld) by Robert B. Laughlin,
  7. Un Universo Diferente by LAUGHLIN ROBERT B., 2007
  8. People From Visalia, California: Monte Melkonian, Michael Finton, Tonya Cooley, Tyler Zeller, Cal Dooley, Robert B. Laughlin, Rich Amaral
  9. A Different Universe: Reinventing Physics from the Bottom Down by Robert B. Laughlin, 2005-04-30
  10. Crimenes de la razon by Robert B. Laughlin, 2010
  11. Abschied von der Weltformel: Die Neuerfindung der Physik by Robert B. Laughlin,
  12. UN UNIVERS DIFF�RENT by ROBERT B. LAUGHLIN, 2006-01-13
  13. A Candle for Darkness by Robert Mangum; B492 Laughlin, 1972-01-01
  14. Crímenes de la razón. El fin de la mentalidad científica by Robert B. LAUGHLIN, 2010

1. Robert B. Laughlin - Autobiography
robert B. laughlin – Autobiography. experiencing such wonderful things as the surpriseappearance of Charles Townes, winner of the nobel Prize for
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1998/laughlin-autobio.html
EARLY YEARS
BERKELEY

At Berkeley I had my first encounter with real professional scientists. I remember the Berkeley faculty as being particularly visionary and inspirational. In the physics department in particular there was a palpable sense of history going back to Heisenberg Pauli , and Einstein Charles Townes , winner of the Nobel Prize for invention of the laser, in one of my large lecture courses to explain simply and accurately how lasers work and how they came to be invented. I took quantum mechanics from Owen Chamberlain
MILITARY
MIT

I entered graduate school at MIT
It was my good fortune at this time to fall in with John Joannopoulos, a young faculty member who had just come from Marvin Cohen's group at Berkeley. I had heard John talking at a research fair and had noticed that he was the only theorist who seemed genuinely interested in his own work, so I contacted him and asked for a job. Neither of us knew it at the time, but John was to become one a truly great trainer of graduate students, for the list of alumni from his group includes Prof. E.J. Mele at the University of Pennsylvania , Prof. A.D. Stone at Yale, Prof. Karen Rabe at

2. Physics 1998
The nobel Prize in Physics 1998. for their discovery of a new form of quantum fluidwith fractionally charged excitations . robert B. laughlin, Horst L. Störmer,
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1998/
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1998
"for their discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations" Robert B. Laughlin Horst L. Störmer Daniel C. Tsui 1/3 of the prize 1/3 of the prize 1/3 of the prize USA Federal Republic of Germany USA Stanford University
Stanford, CA, USA Columbia University
New York, NY, USA Princeton University
Princeton, NJ, USA b. 1950 b. 1949 b. 1939
(in Henan, China) The Nobel Prize in Physics 1998
Press Release

Presentation Speech

Illustrated Presentation
...
Other Resources
The 1998 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry
Physiology or Medicine Literature ... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

3. Robert B. Laughlin Winner Of The 1998 Nobel Prize In Physics
robert B. laughlin, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. robert B. laughlin. 1998 nobel Laureate
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1998a.html
R OBERT B. L AUGHLIN
1998 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations.
Background

4. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Physics
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS. Name, Year Awarded.Alferov, Zhores I. 2000. Laue, Max Von, 1914. laughlin, robert B. 1998.
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS
Name Year Awarded Alferov, Zhores I. Alfven, Hannes Alvarez, Luis W. Anderson, Carl David ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

5. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Laughlin, Robert B. (1998) (A-L)
Autobiography (nobel site); laughlin, robert B. (1998). Privacy Policy Terms Conditions Site Map Help Contact Us, ©2002 bigchalk.com, inc.
http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Bio
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  • Autobiography (Nobel site)
  • Laughlin, Robert B. (1998)
    Privacy Policy
    Site Map ... Contact Us
  • 6. Nobel Prize
    nobel Prize. robert B. laughlin, professor från San Francisco, USA, skrattaroch säger att han är på nobelfesten för första gången.
    http://large.stanford.edu/rbl/nobel/news/afton.htm
    Nobel Prize
    R.B. Laughlin
    Department of Physics

    Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305
    Aftonsbladet
    Fredag, 11 december 1998
    AFTONBLADETS NOBELREPORTER DANSADE MED FYSIKPRISTAGAREN
    Det var varmt och greppet tryggt. Men det var kemi i luften, trots att danskavaljeren var Nobelpristagare i fysik. De pratade och dansade. Feldt var spralligast

    7. Winners Of The '98 Nobel Prize In Physics Have Experimental And Educational Root
    The experiment that made it all happen for the 1998 nobel Prize in to be splitamong the recipients, will be shared by robert B. laughlin of Stanford
    http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/1998/nobels98.html

    News Releases
    Search MIT News Office Comments ... MIT
    Winners of the '98 Nobel Prize in physics have
    experimental and educational roots at MIT
    October 14, 1998
    Contact Information
    Nobel Prize website
    A list of MIT-related Nobelists
    1998 Nobel Laureate Robert Laughlin is flanked by his wife, Anita, left, and his mother, Peggy, while his son, Todd, looks on at a Stanford University news conference on Oct. 13, 1998. (Photo courtesy of Stanford News Service.) CAMBRIDGE, Mass. The experiment that made it all happen for the 1998 Nobel Prize in physics took place in 1982 at the Francis Bitter Magnet Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Laughlin attributed his comprehensive understanding of physical phenomena to MIT's strong emphasis on engineering. It was a "confluence of things from engineering that prepared me for understanding the fractional quantum Hall effect and coming up with an explanation," he said during a TV interview at Stanford. Although the prize did not go to an MIT faculty member, "this is very much an MIT Nobel Prize," said Robert Birgeneau, dean of science and professor of physics, who recalls Laughlin as "a brilliant and charismatic graduate student, very self-confident, strong-willed and outspoken, even at the student stage" of his career. "He was very clear in his own mind that he wanted to pursue fundamental issues in physics.

    8. MIT Nobel Prize Winners
    from MIT win 2001 nobels in 5 fields MIT news release, October 12, 2001; Thesesof MIT Alumni nobel Prize Winners robert B. laughlin, Physics, MIT PhD
    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

    9. Laughlin Wins Nobel Prize
    Prize in Physics. robert B. laughlin, Horst L. Stoermer, and DanielC. Tsui are the cowinners of the 1998 nobel Prize in Physics.
    http://www-phys.llnl.gov/Laughlin_Nobel.html
    Robert Laughlin awarded 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics
    Robert B. Laughlin The work for which the prize was awarded is for the discovery of a new form of "quantum fluid" that represents "yet another breakthrough in our understanding of quantum physics and to the development of new theoretical concepts of significance in many branches of modern physics." Bob published the seminal theoretical work for this prize in a pair of papers (Phys. Rev. Lett. , 1395 (1983) and Phys. Rev. B , 3383 (1983)) in which he explained a phenomenon discovered by Stoermer and Tsui the year before. At the center of Bob's explanation is "a new state of matter, a quantum fluid the elementary excitations of which...are fractionally charged". It is a state in which the electrons, each carrying an indivisible unit of electric charge, can act together in such a way as to appear like a single particle with a fractional charge. The importance of Bob's work was recognized almost immediately. He received the E. O. Lawrence Award in 1984 from DOE and the Oliver E. Buckley Prize from the American Physical Society in 1986 and now he has received the most prestigious prize in all science.
    Links

    10. Prof. Robert B. Laughlin Visits KIAS
    robert B. laughlin Stanford University nobel Prize Winner in 1998 for their discoveryof a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations
    http://www.kias.re.kr/conf/laughlin.html

    11. Laughlin Wins Nobel Prize In Physics: 10/13/98
    professor to win the nobel Prize in physics in as many years was using the awardas a forum for public support of research. robert B. laughlin, professor of
    http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/report/news/october14/nobel1014.html
    Issue of
    October 14, 1998

    Laughlin shares Nobel Prize; four in a row for physics BY DAVID SALISBURY Within hours of getting a pre-dawn call from the Royal Swedish Academy of Science, the fourth Stanford professor to win the Nobel Prize in physics in as many years was using the award as a forum for public support of research. Robert B. Laughlin, professor of physics and applied physics and the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences, said he wants the public to understand that nature is a wonderful thing that has many surprises. He also wants people to know that providing tax money to scientists to enable them to make fundamental discoveries about nature is vital. Related Information: "I owe a debt of gratitude to the taxpayers in my parents' generation," Laughlin told a roomful of reporters and well-wishers, including his mother, wife and son, at a news conference Oct. 13 in Tresidder Union. "I accuse my generation of not living up to their responsibility to support basic research for future generations."

    12. Science News Online (10/17/98): References For Physics Nobel Spotlights Quantum
    Daniel C. Tsui, Horst L. Störmer, and robert B. laughlin won the 1998 nobel Prizein Physics for their discovery and explanation of the fractional quantum
    http://www.sciencenews.org/sn_arc98/10_17_98/Fob7ref.htm
    October 17
    Physics Nobel spotlights quantum effect Daniel C. Tsui, Horst L. Störmer, and Robert B. Laughlin won the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery and explanation of the fractional quantum Hall effect. References: The announcement of the Nobel Prize in Physics can be found at http://www.nobel.se/announcement-98/physics98.html Further Readings: Anderson, P.W. 1997. When the electron falls apart. Physics Today (October):42. Collins, G.P. 1997. Fractionally charged quasiparticles signal their presence with noise. Physics Today (November):17. Daviss, B. 1998. Splitting the electron. New Scientist (Jan. 31):36. Eisenstein, J.P., and H.L. Störmer. 1990. The fractional quantum Hall effect. Science 248(June 22):1510. Kivelson, S., D.-H. Lee, and S.-C. Zhang. 1996. Electrons in Flatland. Scientific American (March):86. Peterson, I. 1996. Superfluidity finding earns physics Nobel. Science News 150(Oct. 19):247. Thomsen, D.E. 1984. Fractional Hall effect by electrons in chorus. Science News 126(Aug. 25):116.

    13. Search Results For B Physics - Encyclopædia Britannica - The Online Encyclopedi
    in 1967. robert B. laughlin The nobel Foundation Autobiography ofthis 1998 nobel Prize winner for Physics. SACB Documentation
    http://search.britannica.com/search?query=b physics

    14. Search Results For Robert B. Anderson - Encyclopædia Britannica - The Online En
    and publications. robert B. laughlin The nobel Foundation Autobiographyof this 1998 nobel Prize winner for Physics. robert D. Maurer
    http://search.britannica.com/search?query=Robert B. Anderson

    15. Robert B. Laughlin - CIRS
    laughlin, robert B. rbl@large.stanford.edu. for the Advancement of Science, Memberof the National Acamdey of Sciences, Corecipient of the nobel Prize for
    http://www.cirs.net/researchers/physics/LAUGHLIN.htm
    LAUGHLIN, ROBERT B.
    rbl@large.stanford.edu Department of Physics, Stanford University , Stanford, CA, USA.
    Research Interests
    Current research is primarily high-temperature superconductivity theory. Recent work includes model studies of doped Mott insulators, computation spectroscopic quantities optical conductivity, magnetic susceptibility, photoemission from first principles, and development of new mathematical methods based on the fractional quantum Hall effect. These include the use of condensed matter lattice gauge theories, the use of quasiparticles carrying fractional quantum numbers, and the application of conventional Feynman rules to systems containing both. Other interests include the theory of metals, localization, and quantum chaos. physics beyond the Standard Model, and vacuum structure of field theories.
    Awards :
    E.O. Lawrence Award for Physics (1985), Oliver E. Buckley Prize (1986), Eastman Kodak Lecturer, University of Rochester (1989), Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1990), Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Member of the National Acamdey of Sciences, Co-recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physics (1998).
    [home]

    16. Laughlin, Robert B.
    laughlin, robert B. (1950). at school I was experiencing such wonderful thingsas the surprise appearance of Charles Townes, winner of the nobel Prize for
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/L/Laughlin/Laugh
    Laughlin, Robert B. EARLY YEARS
    Another important aspect of our home was respect for ideas. At dinnertime one of my parents, usually my father, would lead a discussion about some controversial matter, such as racial integration of schools, whether John Lennon should have compared himself with Jesus Christ, support of Israel, or the morality of the Vietnam war, and all of us were expected to air and defend our views on these things, even if we did not want to. Over the course of time this gave us a deep respect for ideas, both our own and those of others, and an understanding that conflict through debate is a powerful means of revealing truth. This was, of course, before any of us understood rhetoric and how easily it can be misused. But the need for conflict to expose prejudice and unclear reasoning, which is deeply embedded in my philosophy of science, has its origin in these debates.
    BERKELEY
    MILITARY

    While at Fort Sill I met, or more precisely was grouped with, the people who were to be my companions for the rest of my tour in the military. They were a very personable bunch mostly from the upper Middle West, Pennsylvania, and Nebraska, and rather like a selection of the smarter students from my high school, except that the contingent from Detroit was rabidly racist, something that I had never encountered before and still have trouble understanding. Getting to know these people was my first of many reminders that the world is full of intelligent, well-meaning people who, for one reason or another, did not attend university but are nonetheless well-read and educated. Out there on the prairie lost opportunities of youth were the rule rather than the exception, and I slowly became disabused of the myth of the Bright Young Thing and have not believed in it since.

    17. 1998 Nobel Prize Winner Laughlin Credits Livermore Colleagues
    technological advancements, it is now being cited as a basis for a nobel Prizebynone other than its recipient. Last December, robert B. laughlin, a longtime
    http://www.llnl.gov/str/Laughlin.html
    WHILE Lawrence Livermore's environment of multidisciplinary teamwork has long earned high marks in the research community for nurturing technological advancements, it is now being cited as a basis for a Nobel Prize-by none other than its recipient. Last December, Robert B. Laughlin, a longtime Laboratory employee and a professor of physics at Stanford University, received the 1998 Nobel Prize for physics. Laughlin shared the prize with Horst Stormer of Columbia University and Daniel Tsui of Princeton University.
    In 1983 when Laughlin was a member of the Laboratory's condensed matter division, he provided a groundbreaking-and to some, startling-explanation for Stormer and Tsui's discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect. Laughlin's cogent argument showed that electrons physically confined to two dimensions at very low temperatures and in a powerful magnetic field can condense into a new quantum state with elementary excitations-its "particles"-carrying a fraction of an electron's electrical charge. The explanation, now firmly entrenched as part of quantum physics theory, was considered revolutionary in this context.
    Laughlin received the prize in Stockholm from the Swedish Academy of Sciences on December 10. While he is the seventy-first Nobel Prize winner who worked at or conducted research at a Department of Energy institution or whose work was funded by DOE and is the eleventh University of California employee to receive a Nobel Prize in physics, he is the first National Laboratory employee ever to win the prize.

    18. The Laboratory In The News
    Lawrence Livermore extends its congratulations to robert B. laughlin,one of three sharing the nobel Prize for physics in October 1998.
    http://www.llnl.gov/str/News1298.html
    London to San Francisco in less than two hours
    A revolutionary design for a hypersonic aircraft that could fly between any two points on the globe in less than two hours has been developed by a researcher at Lawrence Livermore. HyperSoar could fly at approximately 6,700 mph (Mach 10), while carrying roughly twice the payload of comparable subsonic aircraft. The HyperSoar concept promises less heat buildup on the airframe than previous hypersonic designs-a challenge that has until now limited the development of aircraft.
    The key to HyperSoar is the skipping motion of its flight along the edge of the Earth's atmosphere-much like a rock skipping across water. A HyperSoar aircraft would ascend to approximately 130,000 feet-lofting outside the Earth's atmosphere-then turn off its engines and coast back to the surface of the atmosphere. There, it would again fire its air-breathing engines and skip back into space. The craft would repeat this process until it reached its destination.
    "We believe the design not only addresses the primary issues in building hypersonic aircraft but does so in a way that creates a number of different uses for HyperSoar, thereby helping offset its development costs," said Livermore aerospace engineer Preston Carter, developer of the concept. Potential applications for HyperSoar include passenger aircraft, air freighters, military aircraft, and space lifts.
    Contact: Preston Carter (925) 423-8293 ( carter17@llnl.gov)

    19. Coonférence De R.B. Laughlin, Prix Nobel De Physique 1998
    Translate this page Sherbrooke, le jeudi 21 octobre 1999 - robert B. laughlin, prix nobel de physique1998, professeur à l’Université Stanford, en Californie, donnera une
    http://www.usherbrooke.ca/medias/communiques/1999/oct/laughlin.htm
    Accueil Communiqués Médias institutionnels Connaître l'Université de Sherbrooke ... Valorisation de la recherche
    Université de Sherbrooke
    2500, boul. de l'Université
    Sherbrooke (Québec)
    Information sur
    les cours et programmes
    1-800-267-UdeS
    Communiqués de presse Janvier Février Mars Avril ... Décembre
    Conférence du prix Nobel de physique 1998
    Sherbrooke, le jeudi 21 octobre 1999 -
    La conférence se déroulera en anglais. En voici le résumé : " The fractional quantum Hall effect is important because it shows experimentally that particles carrying an exact fraction of the electron charge and interacting by means of gauge forces not postulated in the underlying equations of motion can arise spontaneously as a collective effect of ordinary electrons obeying the ordinary laws of quantum mechanics. I will review the history of the discovery and eventual explanation of the effect, and then discuss the larger implications for physics. " Source : Gilles Pelloille, responsable des communications
    (8l9) 821-8000, poste 3395

    20. Fysiikan 98 - Nobelistit
    robert B. laughlin. Links added by nobel InternetArchive visitors add your own link
    http://solis.wwnet.fi/arkisto/Fysiikan98_nobelistit_TKKlla_kuvat/nobel98fy.htm
    Kopioin tämän sivun osoitteesta nobelprizes.com. Tässä esitellään Fysiikan 98 palkinnon saajia. 1998 Nobel Prizes
    Announcements
    physics The prize was awarded jointly to: R OBERT B. L AUGHLIN ... TORMER and D ANIEL C. T SUI for their discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations. 1998 Nobel Laureate in Physics
      for discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations.
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