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         Phillips William D:     more books (100)
  1. The economic performance of late Victorian Britain: Traditional historians and growth (Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Economics. Thesis. 1980. Ph. D) by William Houston Phillips, 1980
  2. Some Smiths & Everitts of Hocking & Fairfield Counties, Ohio (1812-present): Being the descendants of William Smith (d. 1786) of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania by W. Louis Phillips, 1984
  3. The Dawn Of Civilization: The First World Survey Of Human Cultures In Early Times by James Mellaart, M.E.L Mallowan, Cyril Aldred, William Culican, Seton Lloyd, M.S.F. Hood, Sir Mortimer Wheeler, William Watson, Anthony Christie, E.D. Phillips, T.G.E Powell, G.H.S. Bush Grahame Clark, 1961-01-01
  4. AMAZING STORIES - Volume 21, number 8 - August Aug 1947: So Shall ye Reap; The Prop; Negative Problem; First Rocket; Mer-Witch of Ether 18 by Raymond A. (editor) (Rog Phillips; William Lawrence Hamling; Frances Yerxa; D. Richard Sharpe; Richard S. Shaver) Palmer, 1947
  5. A sketch of the late Rt. Rev. Phillips Brooks, D.D by William Henry Brooks, 1894
  6. Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital - Weekly Clinicopathological Exercises / Volumes 338 and 339 - January 8, 1998 to June 25, 1998, Nos. 2-26 and July 9, 1998 to December 31, 1998, Nos. 2-27 by Robert E.; Mark, Eugene J.; McNeely, William F.; Ebeling, Sally H. and Phillips, Lucy D. (Eds.) Scully, 1999
  7. A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue: From the Twelfth Century to the End of the Seventeenth Part 30 (Pt. 30) by Sir William Craigie, A. J. Aitken, et all 1994-01
  8. A Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue: From the Twelfth Century to the End of the Seventeenth Part 31 (Pt. 31) by Sir William Craigie, A. J. Aitken, et all 1994-01
  9. The Black Regulars, 1866-1898 by William A. Dobak, Thomas D. Phillips, 2001-12
  10. Hadden's Journal and Orderly Books: A Journal Kept in Canada and upon Burgoyne's Campaign in 1776 and 1777 (British Accounts of the American Revolution.) by James Murray Hadden, Horatio Rogers, et all 1979-06
  11. Computer Architecture: A Minimalist Perspective by William F. Gilreath, Phillip A. Laplante, 2003-03-01
  12. Poems, By William Cowper, Esq. Together With His Posthumous Poetry, And A Sketch Of His Life By John Johnson, Ll. D. by William Cowper, 1849
  13. Memoirs of William Smith, LL.D.: An Introduction to the Life and Times of William Smith and the William Smith Lecture 2000 by Hugh Torrens by John Phillips, Hugh Torrens, 2003-06-07
  14. BLOOD TRIANGLE ANOTHER MADDY AND ALEX PHILLIPS MYSTERY OF HYPNOTIC DETECTION by R.D. ZIMMERMAN, 1993

81. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Phillips, William D. (1997) (M-Z)
HIGH SCHOOL BEYOND Biography Biographies by Profession NobelPrize Winners Physics MZ phillips, william D. (1997).
http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Bio
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  • World Book Online Article on PHILLIPS, WILLIAM DANIEL
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  • 82. Calendar Announcement
    MA 9801. Calendar Announcement. william D. phillips, 1997 NOBELLAUREATE IN PHYSICS, TO GIVE FREE PUBLIC LECTURE JAN. 24 AT NIST.
    http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/calmed/jan1298c.htm
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
    Jan. 12, 1998
    Contact: Linda Joy
    MA 98-01 Calendar Announcement WILLIAM D. PHILLIPS, 1997 NOBEL LAUREATE IN PHYSICS, TO GIVE
    FREE PUBLIC LECTURE JAN. 24 AT NIST
    William D. Phillips,
    a NIST Fellow, will give a free public lecture, "Almost Absolute Zero, the Story of Laser Cooling and Trapping," on Saturday, Jan. 24, 8 p.m. at the National Institute of Standards and Technology Phillips, a long-time Montgomery County resident known for making complex science accessible to people of all backgrounds, will discuss one of the newest and most rapidly advancing fields of physics. The talk will be based on his Nobel Lecture given in Stockholm, Sweden, in December 1997. When: Saturday Jan. 24, 1998, 8 p.m.
    Where: NIST Red Auditorium, Administration Building
    Gaithersburg, MD
    The public is invited to attend the lecture. For special assistance or further information, please call the NIST Physics Laboratory at (301) 975-4203. Reporters planning to cover the lecture , please call Linda Joy at (301) 975-4403.

    83. Ramapo College Of New Jersey || News And Events
    April 4, 2001. nobel Prize In Physics Laureate william D. PhillipsTo Give Public Lecture At Ramapo College. (Mahwah) william D
    http://www.ramapo.edu/news/pressreleases/2001/04_04_2001.html
    News Release Archives
    April 4, 2001 Nobel Prize In Physics Laureate William D. Phillips
    To Give Public Lecture At Ramapo College
    (Mahwah) William D. Phillips, a Fellow at the National Institute of Standards and Technology who was awarded the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, will give a public lecture at Ramapo College of New Jersey Wednesday, April 25 at 4 p.m. in the Sharp Theater. The lecture, "Absolute Zero: The Story of Laser Cooling and Trapping," is an updated version of the Nobel Lecture given in Stockholm on December 8, 1997. It is aimed at a general audience of non-scientists, but discusses some of the newest and most exciting developments in physics. "Contrary to intuition, we can cool down a gas by shining a laser on it," explains Phillips. His lecture will describe how laser cooling works, and why it works better than anyone expected it to. "We can now cool a gas of atoms to less than a millionth of a degree above absolute zero the coldest temperatures in the universe," Phillips continues. "Atoms this cold exhibit weird and wonderful properties and are being used for applications ranging from super-accurate atomic clocks to new quantum devices like atom lasers." Phillips is internationally known for advancing basic knowledge and new techniques to chill atoms to extremely low temperatures. The cooling and trapping of atoms, a discipline that emerged in the mid-1970s with the advent of laboratory lasers, has allowed scientists to observe and measure quantum phenomena in atoms that seem to defy the physical principles governing our tangible room-temperature realm.

    84. Phillips, William D.
    phillips, william D. (1948). My father, william (Bill) Cornelius phillips, wasborn in Juniata, a community on the edge of Altoona, in 1907.
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/P/Phillips/Phill

    85. Autobiography Of William D. Phillips
    william D. phillips. My father, william (Bill) Cornelius phillips, was bornin Juniata, a community on the edge of Altoona, in 1907.
    http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1997/phillips-autobio.html

    86. Phillips, William D. -- Encyclopædia Britannica Online Article
    to cool and trap atoms earned him the nobel Prize for MLA style phillips, WilliamD.. Encyclopædia Britannica 2003 Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service
    http://search.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=120321&tocid=0&query=steven berkoff&c

    87. APS Prizes And Awards - 1998 Arthur L. Schawlow Prize Recipient
    Background william D. phillips received a BS in Physics from PA in 1970 and his Ph.D.from MIT in Dr. phillips has received many awards and honors, including
    http://www.aps.org/praw/schawlow/98winner.html
    Questions? Comments?
    Menu Courtesy of milonic.co.uk/menu
    1998 Arthur L. Schawlow Prize to
    William D. Phillips
    N. I. S. T.
    Citation:
    "For pioneering experiments in laser cooling and trapping, including the first demonstrations of Zeeman cooling, the magnetic trapping of neutral atoms and the extension of laser cooling below the Doppler limit." Background:
    William D. Phillips received a B. S. in Physics from Juniata College, Huntington, PA in 1970 and his Ph.D. from MIT in 1976. After two years as a Chaim Weizmann postdoctoral fellow at MIT, he joined the staff of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (then the National Bureau of Standards) in 1978. He is the leader of the Laser Cooling and Trapping Group in the Atomic Physics Division of NIST's Physics Laboratory. Dr. Phillips has received many awards and honors, including election as a NIST Fellow, the Michelson Medal of the Franklin Institute, and most recently the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work in laser cooling and trapping. He is a member of the APS, the Optical Society of America, the American Academy of Arts and Science, the National Academy of Sciences, Sigma Xi Research Society, and the Society of Physics Students.

    88. Press Releases -- NJIT America's "Most Wired" Public University
    NEWARK , November 5, 1999 Dr. william D. phillips, recipient of the 1997 NobelLaureate of Physics with fellow researchers Steven Chu and Claude Cohen
    http://www.njit.edu/News/Releases/21a.html
    window.defaultStatus="NJIT America's Most Wired Public University"
    Nobel Prize Winner in Physics to Speak at Fall Colloquium( Ref.#21a
    NEWARK , November 5, 1999 -
    Dr. William D. Phillips, recipient of the 1997 Nobel Laureate of Physics with fellow researchers Steven Chu and Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, will present "Absolute Zero: The Story of Laser Cooling and Trapping" at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT)-Rutgers-Newark Applied Physics Program Fall Colloquium to be held on the NJIT campus, in the Guttenberg Information Technologies Center Room 1400, on Friday, November 12, 1999 at 3:30 pm. Refreshments will be served at 3 pm. This lecture will describe methods used by the three researchers to cool atoms within a few millionths of a degree of absolute zero by trapping diffuse clouds of atoms in an "optical molasses" of lasers and magnetic fields. Gas atoms at room temperature normally travel at speeds approaching 4000 km/hour, but cooling slows speeds to under a kilometer an hour, allowing atoms to be studied more readily. The technique also formed the basis for the discovery of Bose-Einstein condensation in atomic gases, a bizarre new form of matter imagined by Einstein but only recently observed, and may have other applications, like making tinier electronics, and tools to measure gravitational forces with extreme precision.

    89. Sxt99Feb22
    william D. phillips earned his Ph.D. in physics in Dr. phillips has received manyhonors, including the Outstanding Young Scientist Award from the Maryland
    http://www.njit.edu/Professional_Society/SigmaXi/sxt99Nov12.htm
    SIGMA XI - NJIT CHAPTER and
    JOINT NJIT-RUTGERS (NEWARK) APPLIED PHYSICS PROGRAM
    present a seminar on Friday, November 12, 1999 at 3:30 p.m. (Refreshments at 3:00 p.m.) 1400 Guttenberg Information Technology Center New Jersey Institute of Technology Almost Absolute Zero: The Story of Laser Cooling and Trapping Dr. William D. Phillips - 1997 Nobel Laureate of Physics - National Institute of Standards and Technology
    ABSTRACT Contrary to intuition, we can cool the kinetic motion of a gas by shining a laser on it. This lecture will describe how laser cooling works, how it allowed us to trap atoms in a magnetic field, and why it works better than anyone had expected it to. Using new tricks, we can now cool a gas of atoms to well below a microkelvin the coldest kinetic temperatures ever. Atoms this cold exhibit weird and wonderful properties and are being used for applications ranging from super-accurate atomic clocks to new quantum devices like atom lasers. The lecture is an updated version of the Nobel Lecture given in Stockholm on 8 December 1997.
    BIOGRAPHY William D. Phillips earned his Ph.D. in physics in 1976 at MIT. After completing post-doctoral re-search also at MIT, he came to NIST (then the National Bureau of Standards) in 1978. A NIST Fellow since 1996, Dr. Phillips is internationally known for advancing basic knowledge and new techniques to chill atoms to extremely low temperatures. Dr. Phillips has received many honors, including the Outstanding Young Scientist Award from the Maryland Academy of Science in 1984, the Gold Medal of the US Department of Commerce in 1993, the Albert A. Michelson Medal of the Franklin Institute in 1996 and the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997. In 1997 he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences

    90. Lemelson Center Invention Features: William Phillips
    william phillips An insatiable curiosity about the way things work led william phillipsto a career in physics and phillips was awarded a Ph.D. in physics in
    http://www.si.edu/lemelson/centerpieces/ilives/phillips/phillips.html
    SUPERCOOL SCIENTIST: WILLIAM PHILLIPS
    by Martha Davidson
    An insatiable curiosity about the way things work led William Phillips to a career in physics and, eventually, to groundbreaking research on the atom. Phillips, a scientist in the Atomic Physics Division of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), shared the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics with two other physicists in recognition of their development of new techniques to cool and trap atoms with laser light. By cooling atoms to nearly absolute zero, Phillips and his colleagues opened up a new field of subatomic research and technology that makes possible more accurate atomic clocks and other precise measuring and navigational devices. Phillips spoke with seventh-grade students from three schools (the Queen Anne School in Upper Marlboro, Md.; the Ormond Stone Middle School in Centreville, Va.; and the Nysmith School in Herndon, Va.) at the Lemelson Center's April 2001 Innovative Lives program. He told the students how he came to be a physicist and described his research in supercooling atoms. A straight-A student in high school, Phillips had no trouble selecting a major when he went to college. "It seems like I've been interested in physics as long as I can remember," he says. At Juniata College in Pennsylvania, he took courses in many areas of physics, including mechanics, electricity, and thermodynamics. "There's a whole lot of different subjects in physics you have to take, because physics encompasses so many different aspects of the way the world works. I have to understand all sorts of different kinds of physicsthe physics of heat, the physics of electricity, the physics of motion, the physics of lasers. So I took all those kinds of classes when I was in college."

    91. News Archive -- By Date
    Account Global Warming, Other Factors (william D. Nordhaus), Yale on the Day (PeterCB phillips), February 8 Seven Novel Economists, edited by william Breit and
    http://cowles.econ.yale.edu/archive/PEOPLE2.htm
    News Archive By Date News Index Events Photo Gallery Cowles Home ... Why Wages Don't Fall During a Recession (Truman F. Bewley) , Kenneth J. McLaughlin, Industrial and Labor Relations Review (2), January 2001 Centennial Lecture on Global 'Public Goods' (William D. Nordhaus) , Yale News Release, January 24, 2001 The Mystery of Economic Recessions (Robert J. Shiller) The New York Times OP-ED , February 4, 2001 Economist William Nordhaus to Discuss Dilemmas Raised by 'Global Public Goods' , February 16, 2001 Stock Market Psych Out (Robert J. Shiller) New Haven Register , February 25, 2001 Nordhaus is Sterling Professor of Economics , March 2, 2001 Yale Economics Professor Awarded Grant from The Glaser Foundation (William D. Nordhaus) , Yale News Release, March 7, 2001 The Fed Can't Prop Up the Falling Markets (Robert J. Shiller) The Wall Street Journal , March 16, 2001 Bush's Tax Cuts: A Shot in the Arm or the Foot? (James Tobin, Philip Levy, John Rust) The Yale Herald , March 30, 2001 Fiscal Policy: Its Macroeconomic Perspective (James Tobin) The Politic , Spring 2001 Shiller and Siegel: Two Takes on the Market The Wharton Journal , April 23, 2001 Tobin Tax Caucus (Video Conference), Kennedy School of Government, May 1, 2001

    92. The Alfred B. Nobel Prize Winners: Physics
    Advertisement. nobel Prize Winners for Physics. 1997, Steven Chu william D. PhillipsClaude CohenTannoudji, United States United States France.
    http://history1900s.about.com/library/misc/blnobelphysics.htm
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    Nobel Prize Winners for Physics
    Chemistry Physiology or Medicine Literature Peace ... Economics Germany Hendrik A. Lorentz
    Pieter Zeeman Netherlands
    Netherlands Antoine Henri Becquerel Pierre Curie Marie Curie France France Poland-France John W. Strutt Great Britain Philipp E. A. von Lenard Germany Sir Joseph J. Thomson Great Britain Albert A. Michelson United States Gabriel Lippmann France Carl F. Braun Guglielmo Marconi Germany Italy Johannes D. van der Waals Netherlands Wilhelm Wien Germany Nils G. Dalen

    93. Premio Nobel De Física 2000 - Diario De Yucatán
    de la super fluidez del helio-3 . Douglas D. Osheroff. Robert C. Richardson.
    http://www.yucatan.com.mx/especiales/nobel2000/fisica.asp
    Premios Nóbel 2000
    El Premio Nóbel en Física
    La Física es una de las cinco áreas premiadas las cuales menciona el testamento de Alfred Nóbel. El testamento, sin embargo, nunca fue completado. Nóbel simplemente mencionó que los premios deberían de ser otorgados a quienes, en el año precedente, "hayan otorgado el mayor beneficio a la humanidad" y que una parte sea otorgada a la persona que "haya hecho el descubrimiento o invento más importante en el campo de la física". Él también designó a la Academia Real de Ciencias de Suecia para otorgar el Premio de Física, y fue su firme deseo que, al otorgar el premio, "no exista consideración alguna a la nacionalidad de los candidatos, sino que el más valioso lo recibiera, sea o no escandinavo"
    Ganadores 1981 - 1999 Gerardus 't Hooft "por explicar la estructura cuántica de interacciones electrónicas débiles en física"
    Martinus J.G. Veltman

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