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         Shockley William:     more books (61)
  1. "Transistor TechnologyEvokes New Physics": An entry from Gale's <i>American Decades: Primary Sources</i>
  2. Race, Intelligence and Bias in Academe by Roger Pearson, 1991-06
  3. Cemeteries of West Jersey Twp., Stark County, IL by William O Turnbull, 2001
  4. The Woodward 100th anniversary manual, 1831-1931 by Albert D Shockley, 1931
  5. Religious educators oral history: Religious education in the twentieth century in the United States : a fourteen-volume project in oral history, 1992-1997 by William Bean Kennedy, 1997

81. ClubCaminantes - Premios Nobel - Fisica, El Club De Los Caminantes
Translate this page PREMIOS nobel, FISICA. 1901-1925 1926-1950 1951-1975 1976-2000. 1951. MurrayHill, NJ, Estados Unidos. shockley, william B. (Estados Unidos).
http://caminantes.metropoliglobal.com/web/nobel/fisica3.htm

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Foros Chat Top 10 ... PREMIOS NOBEL
FISICA
Cockcroft, John D. Por su trabajo pionero en la transmutación del nucleo atómico por partículas atómicas artificialmente aceleradas. Establecimiento de Investigación de la Energia Atómica. Harwell Didcot, Gran Bretaña Walton, Ernest T.S. (Irlanda) Por su trabajo pionero en la transmutación del nucleo atómico por partículas atómicas artificialmente aceleradas. Universidad de Dublin. Dublin, Irlanda
Bloch, Felix (Estados Unidos) Por el desarrollo conjunto de nuevos métodos para medidas magneticas nucleares de precisión, y sus descubrimientos derivados de las aplicación de estos métodos. Universidad de Stanford. Stanford, CA, Estados Unidos Purcell, Edward M. (Estados Unidos) Por el desarrollo conjunto de nuevos métodos para medidas magneticas nucleares de precisión, y sus descubrimientos derivados de las aplicación de estos métodos.

82. American Scientist - Scientists' Bookshelf
right) invented the transistor in 1947 at Bell Labs, where william shockley (center)was their supervisor. In 1956 the three men shared the nobel Prize in
http://www.americanscientist.org/bookshelf/Leads03/03-03Tbuchwald.html

Mar.-Apr. 2003
John Who? True Genius: The Life and Science of John Bardeen . Lillian Hoddeson and Vicki Daitch. xii + 467 pp. Joseph Henry Press, 2002. $27.95.
True Genius recounts with empathy and enthusiasm the rich and varied career of a remarkably creative scientist who is little known outside a limited community of solid-state physicists and engineers—John Bardeen, the only person ever to win the Nobel Prize in Physics twice. This new biography, a work of thorough scholarship, was coauthored by historians Lillian Hoddeson and Vicki Daitch; Hoddeson, who is also a physicist, wrote the 1997 history of solid-state physics Crystal Fire Bardeen was born in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1908 to progressive parents who had a strong devotion to education: His father was founder and first dean of the University of Wisconsin Medical School, and his mother had once taught at John Dewey's experimental Laboratory School of the University of Chicago. Together they nurtured John's emerging mathematical talents. In spite of the tragic loss of his mother at age 11, Bardeen completed his high school curriculum at 13 and became a "college man" two years later. He attended the University of Wisconsin, studying with some of the preeminent men of science of that generation—John Van Vleck, Peter Debye, Werner Heisenberg and Paul Dirac (who all became Nobel laureates), as well as Warren Weaver and Arnold Sommerfeld. It took Bardeen five years to graduate, because he had difficulty choosing an area of concentration (oscillating between physics, engineering and mathematics) and spent a semester working at Western Electric Company. He got a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering in 1928.

83. HTML REDIRECT
nobel Lecture Autobiography (in English) Biography (in German) Obituary from theBoston The prize was awarded to shockley, william, USA, b. 1910, (in London
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel.html
Redirect Redirecting to http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel

84. Prémios Nobel
Translate this page . Prémios nobel de Física. 1956 - John BARDEEN, william BRATTAN ewilliam shockley ( americanos ) Desenvolvimento do transístor.
http://luisperna.com.sapo.pt/nobel_fisica.htm
Prémios Nobel de Física 2002 - Masatoshi Koshiba (japonês), Raymond Davis Jr., (norte-americano) e Riccardo Giacconi (norte-americano), foram galardoados, respectivamente, pelas suas contribuições pioneiras para a astrofísica, em particular na detecção de neutrinos (os dois primeiros) e pela descoberta das fontes cósmicas de raios X (o terceiro). Os seus trabalhos alteraram a simples forma de ver as estrelas, as galáxias e o Sol, que não têm sempre o mesmo aspecto, não são estáticos, mas envolvem processos de altas energias que emitem partículas que atravessam a Terra. 2001 - Eric CORNELL ( americano ), Carl WIEMAN ( americano ) e Wolfgang KETTERLE ( alemão ) Trabalhando em laboratórios separados, o trio criou um método de "ultra-resfriamento de átomos", usando temperaturas que são "milhões de vezes mais baixas do que as encontradas no espaço interstelar". A corrente de átomos altamente direccionável pode ser utilizada para fazer chips atómicos e estes novos produtos podem servir de base para uma nova geração da computação. 2000 - Zhores I. ALFEROV ( russo ), Herbert KROEMER ( americano ) e Jack S. KILBY ( americano )

85. Invent Now | Hall Of Fame | Search | Inventor Profile
Patent Number(s) 2,502,488; 2,524,035 Inducted 1974 Physicists John Bardeen, WilliamB. shockley, and Walter Brattain shared the 1956 nobel Prize for jointly
http://www.invent.org/hall_of_fame/1_1_6_detail.asp?vInventorID=134

86. Shockley
Translate this page shockley, william Bradford (1910-1989), físico estadounidense, premiado con el Nobely coinventor del transistor. Nació en Londres de padres estadounidenses.
http://www.geocities.com/fisicaquimica99/shockley.htm
Shockley, William Bradford (1910-1989), físico estadounidense, premiado con el Nobel y coinventor del transistor. Nació en Londres de padres estadounidenses. Trabajó en los laboratorios de la Compañía Telefónica Bell desde 1936 hasta 1956, año en que fue nombrado director de la Shockley Transistor Corporation en Palo Alto, California. Dio conferencias en la Universidad Stanford desde 1958 y fue profesor de ingeniería en 1963. Sus investigaciones sobre los semiconductores le llevaron al desarrollo del transistor en 1948. Por esta investigación compartió en 1956 el Premio Nobel de Física con sus asociados John Bardeen y Walter H. Brattain. Con posterioridad publicó varios polémicos ensayos en los que argumentó que la inteligencia es ante todo hereditaria.

87. The Twisted Legacy Of William Shockley
Los Angeles Times Magazine The Twisted Legacy of william shockley Perhaps no otherNobel laureate had a greater impact on California's industrial stature than
http://www.latimes.com/features/printedition/magazine/la-120201shockley.story
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88. Scientists Born 1901-1950
Walter Houser Brattain (19021987) scientist who, along with John Bardeen andWilliam B. shockley, won the nobel Prize for Physics in 1956 for his
http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/electrochemists5.htm
HTTP 200 Document follows Date: Sun, 20 Apr 2003 15:04:37 GMT Server: NCSA/1.5.2 Last-modified: Sat, 19 Apr 2003 11:05:50 GMT Content-type: text/html Content-length: 17998 Famous Scientists
greatly contributed to "electro" science:
electricity, electromagnetism, electrical technology, electronics, electrical telegraphy, radio, electrochemistry, electromedicine, etc.
Scientists born after 1901
Allen Balcom Du Mont
invented first commercial TV by perfecting cathode ray tube; made radar possible by devising the first TV guidance system for missiles Sigurd F. Varian
co-inventor of the klystron tube and co-founder of Varian Associates Company together with his brother Russell Varian Robert Jemison Van de Graaff
inventor of the Van de Graaff electrostatic generator that serves as a type of particle accelerator Arne Wilhelm Kaurin Tiselius
Swedish biochemist who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1948 for his work on electrophoresis and adsorption analysis Walter Houser Brattain
scientist who, along with John Bardeen and William B. Shockley, won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1956 for his investigation resulting in the developent of transistors Wiktor Kemula
famous Polish chemist, electrochemist, polarographist, greatly contributed to the development of electroanalytical chemistry, particularly polarography, developed a hanging mercury drop electrode (HMDE)

89. Physics At Minnesota: Minnesota Physics Nobel Laureates
Walter Brattain won the nobel Prize in 1956 with John Bardeen and william Shockleyfor their research on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor
http://www.spa.umn.edu/info/nobel.html
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Minnesota Physics Nobel Laureates
Arthur Compton
Arthur H. Compton began his post-doctoral research in X-ray scattering at Minnesota where he was a physics instructor during 1916-17. While those early experiments were not an immediate success, they paved the way for his Nobel-prize winning discovery of the Compton Effect. In 1922 Compton calculated that a quantum of radiation undergoes a discrete change in wavelength when it experiences a billiard ball collison with an electron at rest in an atom, and his X-ray scattering experiments confirmed this change in wavelength. The phenomenon soon became known as the Compton Effect, and for his discovery he received the Nobel in 1927.
Ernest Lawrence
Ernest O. Lawrence received his masters degree from the University of Minnesota in 1923. He began his research in nuclear physics at Minnesota, which led to his invention six years later of a device for accelerating nuclear particles to very high velocities without the use of high voltages. This device, the cyclotron, was used to bombard atoms of various elements, disintegrating the atoms to form, in some cases, completely new elements. Hundreds of radioactive isotopes of the known elements were also discovered.Ernest O. Lawrence won the Nobel Prize in 1939 for the invention of the cyclotron and for results obtained with it.

90. The Nobel Prize
He'd heard some advance rumors that they might win the nobel. WilliamShockley arrived in Stockholm late due to a cancelled flight.
http://www.pbs.org/transistor/background1/events/nobelprize.html
"Oh, I certainly remember the day Bill got the Nobel Prize! I never adjourned to start drinking champagne at nine o'clock in the morning in any other occasion in my life!" Gordon Moore ,interview for "Transistorized!"
"The summit of Everest was reached by a small party of ardent climbers. Working from an advance base, they succeeded. More than a generation of mountaineers had toiled to establish that base. Your assault on the semiconductor problem was likewise launched from a high altitude camp, contributed by many scientists. Yours, too, was a supreme effort of foresight, ingenuity and perseverance exercised individually and as a team." Erik Rudberg to the inventors of the transistor, during the Nobel Prize Award ceremonies. "As Bardeen and Brattain were having drinks with their hosts in the hotel bar, they noticed Shockley and his wife coming in after all the festivities were over. And they invited him to come on over and share a few drinks with them, and it seemed at that point that all of the hard feelings of the past years had kind of evaporated. They were the heroes in Valhalla. They were the gods of the field. And a lot of the ill feelings began to melt away." Michael Riordan , interview for "Transistorized!"

91. International: Italiano: Scienze: Fisica: Fisici_e_Ricercatori: Shockley,_Willia
Translate this page In tutta la Directory.
http://open-site.org/International/Italiano/Scienze/Fisica/Fisici_e_Ricercatori/
Open Site The Open Encyclopedia Project Pagina Principale Aggiungi Contenuti Diventa Editore In tutta la Directory Solo in Fisici_e_Ricercatori/Shockley,_William_Bradford Top International Italiano Scienze ... Fisici e Ricercatori : Shockley, William Bradford
Vedi anche: Questa Categoria ha bisogno di un Editore - Richiedila Open Site Code 0.4.1 modifica

92. Stanford University Department Of Physics - Nobel Prize Winners
Three nobel Prize Winners in a row for the Department of Physics(four in a row for the Physics community at Stanford).
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/people/nobel.html
Three Nobel Prize Winners in a row for the Department of Physics (four in a row for the Physics community at Stanford).
Professor Robert Laughlin 's Nobel in Physics
Professor Steven Chu 's Nobel in Physics
Professor Douglas Osheroff 's Nobel in Physics Other Physics Nobel Prizes for Stanford: Other Physics Nobel Laureates who were Stanford faculty (at the time of, after, or before receiving the Nobel):

93. Dipartimento Di Scienza Dei Materiali - I Nobel
Translate this page I nobel. Nel corso della storia numerosi premi nobel sono stati attribuiti per ricerchestrettamente collegate con quella che è oggi la Scienza dei Materiali.
http://www.mater.unimib.it/what.php?subpag=2

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