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         Yukawa Hideki:     more books (28)
  1. Kagaku bunmei to sozosei (Yukawa Hideki chosakushu) (Japanese Edition) by Hideki Yukawa, 1989
  2. Yukawa Hideki to Tomonaga Shinichiro =: Hideki Yukawa and Shinichirou Tomonaga (Japanese Edition) by Seitaro Nakamura, 1992
  3. Yukawa Hideki ron (Japanese Edition) by Sosuke Takauchi, 1993
  4. Soryushi no tankyu (Yukawa Hideki chosakushu) (Japanese Edition) by Hideki Yukawa, 1989
  5. Gakumon ni tsuite (Yukawa Hideki chosakushu) (Japanese Edition) by Hideki Yukawa, 1989
  6. Sin-Itiro Tomonaga: Quantum Electrodynamics, Nobel Prize in Physics, Richard Feynman, Julian Schwinger, Kyoto University, Hideki Yukawa, World War II, Nuclear Physics, Cavity Magnetron
  7. Creativity and Intuition: A Physicist Looks at East and West by Hideki (Translated By John Bester) Yukawa, 1973-01-01
  8. Scientific works by Hideki Yukawa, 1979
  9. Meson Theory in its Development. 7pp. IN: Les Prix Nobel en 1949. by Hideki YUKAWA, 1950
  10. Meson Theory in its Development. by Hideki. YUKAWA, 1950
  11. Meson Theory in its Development. 7pp. IN: Les Prix Nobel en 1949. by Hideki YUKAWA, 1950
  12. Tabibito the Traveler Eki Yukawa
  13. FOUNDATIONS OF NUCLEAR PHYSICS: FACSIMILES OF THIRTEEN FUNDAMENTAL PAPERS BY E. FERMI, F. JOLIOT, HIDEKI YUKAWA, CARL D. ANDERSON, M.S. LIVINGSTON, J.D. COCKCROFT, E.T.S. WALTON, O. HAHN, O. STERN, G. GAMOW, J. CHADWICK, F. STRASSMANN, E. O. LAWRENCE, E. RUTHERFORD, IRENE CURIE, AND R. FRISCH AS THEY WERE ORIGINALLY REPORTED IN SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS. by Robert T., ed. Beyer, 1949
  14. Tabibito

21. Yukawa, Hideki
Translate this page hideki yukawa est né à Tokyo, le Japon, le 23 janvier de l'Académie du Japon àyukawa en 1940 et la récompense(sentence) suprême, le Prix nobel contre la
http://www.cartage.org.lb/fr/themes/Biographies/mainbiographie/y/yukawa/yukawa.h
Yukawa, Hideki Hideki Yukawa est né à Tokyo, le Japon, le 23 janvier 1907, le troisième fils de Takuji Ogawa, qui est devenu plus tard le Professeur de Géologie à l'Université Kyoto. Le Lauréat futur a été monté dans Kyoto et a terminé ses études à l'université locale en 1929. Puisque ce temps-là il a été engagé sur des enquêtes dans la physique théorique, en particulier dans la théorie de particules élémentaires.
Yukawa a été invité comme la Visite du Professeur à l'Institut pour l'Etude Avancée à Princeton, les Etats-Unis, en 1948 et depuis juillet 1949 il a Rendu visite au Professeur à l'Université de la Colombie, New York.
Les sociétés apprises de son pays natal ont reconnu sa capacité et il est un membre de l'Académie du Japon, la Société Physique et le Conseil de Science de Japon et est le Professeur honoraire d'Université d'Osaka. Comme le Directeur de l'Institut de recherches pour la Physique Fondamentale dans l'Université Kyoto il a son bureau dans le Hall Yukawa, qui est nommé après lui. Il est aussi un Associé Etranger de l'Académie Nationale américaine de Sciences et l'homme de la Société Physique américaine. On a attribué le Prix Impérial de l'Académie du Japon à Yukawa en 1940; il a reçu la Décoration de Mérite Culturel en 1943 et la récompense(sentence) suprême, le Prix Nobel contre la Physique, en 1949.

22. Hideki Yukawa - Wikipedia
hideki yukawa ( , January 23, 1907 September 8, 1981) is a Japanesetheoretical physicist and the first Japanese who won nobel prize.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hideki_Yukawa
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Hideki Yukawa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Hideki Yukawa January 23 September 8 ) is a Japanese theoretical physicist and the first Japanese who won Nobel prize. He was born in Tokyo , on January 23 . In , he became a lecturer at Kyoto Imperial University in his 22 after graduated from there. Since graduation, he had been doing research about theoretical physics , particularly in the theory of elementary particle . In , he got married with Sumiko and had two sons, Harumi and Takaaki. In he became a professor and an assistant professor at Osaka University in his 26. In he published Theory of Meson , which explained the relationship between protons and neutrons and largely influenced the research of elementary particles. In

23. Biography Of H. Yukawa
hideki yukawa was born in Tokyo, Japan, on 23rd January, 1907 the Japan Academy wasawarded to yukawa in 1940 1943, and the crowning award, the nobel Prize for
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1949/yukawa-bio.html
Nobel Prize in Physics 1901-2000
http://www.nobel.se
HIDEKI YUKAWA
Hideki Yukawa was born in Tokyo, Japan, on 23rd January, 1907, the third son of Takuji Ogawa, who later became Professor of Geology at Kyoto University . The future Laureate was brought up in Kyoto and graduated from the local university in 1929. Since that time he has been engaged on investigations in theoretical physics, particularly in the theory of elementary particles.
Between 1932 and 1939 he was a lecturer at the Kyoto University and lecturer and Assistant Professor at the Osaka University . Yukawa gained the D.Sc. degree in 1938 and from the following year he has been, and still is, Professor of Theoretical Physics at Kyoto University. While at Osaka University, in 1935, he published a paper entitled "On the Interaction of Elementary Particles. I." ( Proc.Phys.-Math. Soc.Japan, 17, p. 48

24. Physics 1949
The nobel Prize in Physics 1949. for his prediction of the existence of mesonson the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces . hideki yukawa. Japan.
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1949/
Nobel Prize in Physics 1901-2000
http://www.nobel.se
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1949
"for his prediction of the existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces" Hideki Yukawa Japan Kyoto Imperial University
Kyoto, Japan
and Columbia University
New York, NY, USA The Nobel Prize in Physics 1949
Presentation Speech

Hideki Yukawa
Biography

25. Yukawa_Note
gallery index. hideki yukawa. He received the nobel Prize (physics)for the first time as a Japanese scholar. He published a monumental
http://www.bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/phisci/Gallery/yukawa_note.html
Hideki Yukawa He received the Nobel Prize (physics) for the first time as a Japanese scholar. In 1935, Yukawa published a monumental paper, "On the Interaction of Elementary Particles, I", and introduced a new particle called "meson", in order to explain both the strong interaction and the weak interaction between elementary particles. But here, we may confine ourselves to the strong interaction within the nucleus of an atom. Yukawa thought that the binding force within nucleus, between proton and neutron, for instance, can be explained only by introducing a new particle, about 200 times heavier than electron. And a number of other articles, by Yukawa and collaborators, followed. He was appointed to a professr of mechanics in Kyoto University in 1939; but the far greater honor, the Nobel prize was given for this work in 1949; and Japanese people who were depressed after the World War II, welcomed this news enthusiastically, and Yukawa became a national hero since then. He was deeply impressed by the personality of Einstein, and it seems that he participated in such social activities as Pugwash conferences somehow out of the sense of duty prompted by Einstein, among others, as far as one can judge from his writings. But, of course, this does not depriciate his activities in the least.

26. Nobel Deeds
It is widely known that the first Japanese to win the nobel Prize wasDr. yukawa hideki (physics) in 1949. That was in recognition
http://www.lookjapan.com/LBst/03AprST.htm
THIS MONTH'S ISSUE ABOUT US LINKS ASK THE EDITOR ... HOME Cover Story (Nov. 1996-) (Jan. 1997-) (Apr. 1998-) (Dec. 1996-) Opinion (Mar. 1998-) Advanced Se arch
JAPANESE
April 2003
Sci-Tech Feature Nobel Deeds The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences again recognized Japanese scientists in 2002 with the award of Nobel Prizes in Physics and Chemistry to Dr. Koshiba Masatoshi and Tanaka Koichi. Nakamura Masami reviews the history of Japanese success in the Nobel science prize areas and looks closely at the work of the two Japanese recipients in 2002. Table 1: Japanese Nobel Laureates (Natural Science Fields) Table 2: The Number of Laureates in Natural Science Fields Source: Center for Interdisciplinary Research, Tohoku University TWO Japanese scientists, Dr. Koshiba Masatoshi (physics) and Tanaka Koichi (chemistry) were among the Nobel laureates for 2002. It was the first time that two Japanese were among the Nobel winners in the same year, and it was the third consecutive year in which a Japanese had won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

27. The Industrial Instruments Of Scientific Success
Meson, of which the existence was predicted by yukawa hideki (who won the nobel Prizein Physics in 1949) 68 years ago, has not yet found industrial application
http://www.lookjapan.com/LBecobiz/03AprEF.htm
THIS MONTH'S ISSUE ABOUT US LINKS ASK THE EDITOR ... HOME Cover Story (Nov. 1996-) (Jan. 1997-) (Apr. 1998-) (Dec. 1996-) Opinion (Mar. 1998-) Advanced Se arch
JAPANESE
April 2003
Economy Feature The Industrial Instruments of Scientific Success Mikami Yoshiki
Shimadzu Corporation

Tanaka Koichi, who won the 2002 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, joined Shimadzu Corporation in 1983, 108 years after Genzou founded the company. Shimadzu Corporation is known among university students for its liberal research and corporate culture. It is therefore very popular among students seeking positions as researchers and engineers.
Hamamatsu Photonics
The city of Hamamatsu is located between Tokyo and Kyoto in Shizuoka-ken. It was the home of Tokugawa Ieyasu, who established the Edo Shogunate 400 years ago. The city is the birthplace of such well-known manufacturers as Honda, Yamaha and Suzuki. It is also home to Hamamatsu Photonics, with 2,100 employees the pioneer of a unique technology called the photomultiplier. The company was founded in 1953 by Hiruma Teruo, who remains president today. Hamamatsu Photonics is the manufacturer of the 1,100 photomultipliers attached to the gigantic observation equipment Kamiokande (Kamioka Nucleon Decay Experiment) of Professor Koshiba Masatoshi, who won the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics.

28. Yukawa
hideki yukawa was honoured with the nobel Prize in Physics for his predictionof the existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces
http://fizjlk.fic.uni.lodz.pl/rut/Stamps/HyperNuc/Yukawa/Yukawa.htm
Hideki Yukawa's (1907-1981) theoretical calculations (performed in 1934) were of fundamental importance for understanding of the forces acting in the atomic nucleus.
Hideki Yukawa was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physics "for his prediction of the existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces" in 1949.

29. Hypernucleus Discovery
The theory of nuclear forces was proposed earlier, in 1935, by hideki yukawa whopredicted the existence of yukawa was honoured with the nobel Prize in
http://fizjlk.fic.uni.lodz.pl/rut/Stamps/HyperNuc/Hyp_Nuc.htm
A Philatelic Story of the Hypernucleus Discovery
by Jerzy H. Rutkowski
This Page is modified version of my paper "A Brief Story of the Hypernucleus Discovery", Philately Atom Japan, In 1947 the general opinion was that atomic nuclei are build of protons and neutrons (nucleons) which are bound together by nuclear forces. The theory of nuclear forces was proposed earlier, in 1935, by Hideki Yukawa who predicted the existence of mesons and invented the meson theory of nuclear forces. According to the theory the nuclear interactions arise due to the exchange process of a meson from one nucleon to another. In an exchange of a charged meson, an electric charge is transferred and a proton is converted into a neutron and the neutron becomes a proton. Similarly, neutral mesons mediate interactions between two protons or two neutrons. The attractive force resulting from such exchange interaction is short-ranged and stronger than the Coulomb repulsion. Yukawa was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physics "for his prediction of existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces" in 1949. After muons had been discovered by Anderson in 1937, they were at first thought to be the particles predicted by Yukawa to explain nuclear forces. But it was soon established that muons did not interact with nucleons and therefore could not take part in the exchange interaction. The year 1947 brought some very important discoveries which initiated elementary particle physics as a separate branch. The first discovery was the one of pions which were recognized as Yukawa particles responsible for the exchange process governing nuclear forces. Next were the observations of strange particles V

30. Untitled
nobele-Museum hideki yukawa This site lists some of his achievements that hegained through his research from society, such as The Imperial Prize of the
http://collaboratory.nunet.net/cybrary/get_links.cfm?CatID=2900

31. Untitled
nobele-Museum hideki yukawa This site states that yukawa was encouraged by thediscovery of the meson to pursue further research into the meson theory.
http://collaboratory.nunet.net/cybrary/get_links.cfm?CatID=2908

32. Liste Des Prix Nobel En Physique
Translate this page LISTE DES PRIX nobel en PHYSIQUE Année, Nom, Pays. 1901, WC Rötgen,Allemagne. 1948, PMS Blackett, Grande-Bretagne, 1949, yukawa hideki,Japon,
http://www.cegep-st-laurent.qc.ca/depar/physique/hisnobe.htm
LISTE DES PRIX NOBEL
en PHYSIQUE
Nom Pays
Allemagne H.A. Lorentz Pays-Bas (Hollande) P. Zeeman Pays-Bas H. Becquerel France M. Curie France P. Curie France J.W.S. Rayleigh Grande-Bretagne P. Lenard Allemagne J.J. Thomson Grande-Bretagne A.A. Michelson G. Lippmann France G. Marconi Italie K.F. Braun Allemagne J.D. Van der Waals Pays-Bas W. Wien Allemagne H. Kamerlingh Onnes Pays-Bas M. von Laue Allemagne W.H. Bragg Grande-Bretagne W.L. Bragg Grande-Bretagne C.G. Barkla Grande-Bretagne M. Planck Allemagne J. Stark Allemagnes C.E. Guillaume Suisse A. Einstein Allemagne N. Bohr Danemark R.A. Millikan K.M.G. Siegbahn J. Franck Allemagne G. Hertz Allemagne J. Perrin France A.H. Compton C.T.R. Wilson Grande-Bretagne O.W. Richardson Grande-Bretagne L.V. de Broglie France C.V. Raman Inde W. Heisenberg Autriche Autriche P.A.M. Dirac Grande-Bretagne J. Chadwick Grande-Bretagne V.F. Hess Autriche C.D. Anderson C.J. Davisson G.P. Thomson Grande-Bretagne E. Fermi Italie E.O. Lawrence O. Stern I.I. Rabi W. Pauli Suisse P.W. Bridgman E.V. Appleton Grande-Bretagne P.M.S. Blackett Grande-Bretagne Yukawa Hideki Japon C.F. Powell

33. Yukawa
Translate this page yukawa hideki 1907 - 1981 né à Tokyo, au Japon. Prix nobel 1949 Pourexpliquer les forces nucléaires, yukawa a émit l'hypothèse
http://www.cegep-st-laurent.qc.ca/depar/physique/hisyuka.htm
YUKAWA HIDEKI
Prix Nobel : 1949
existait vraiment.

34. Essays Page
mesons, subatomic particles that possess masses between those of the electron andthe proton, hideki yukawa became the first Japanese to receive a nobel Prize.
http://www.fofweb.com/Subscription/Science/Helicon.asp?SID=2&iPin=eworldsci0388

35. Premio Nobel De Fiziko - Vikipedio
Fiziko Premio nobel de Fiziko Premio nobel. La Premio nobel de Fizikoestas disdonata ekde 1901. 1949 yukawa hideki. 1950 Cecil Frank POWELL.
http://eo.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premio_Nobel_de_Fiziko

36. Untitled
hideki yukawa (19071981), a Japanese physicist, who won the nobel Prize for physicsin 1949, is known for his theory of how the nuclear force holds the
http://www.phy.hr/~dpaar/fizicari/yukawa.html
Hideki Yukawa (1907-1981), a Japanese physicist, who won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1949, is known for his theory of how the nuclear force holds the nucleus together. As a result of this theory, he predicted (1935) the existence of the meson, a subatomic particle, found in 1947 by Cecil Powell.

37. Physics Nobel Laureates 1925 - 1949
The first nobel prize in physics was awarded to Wilhelm Röntgen in yukawa, hideki,Japan, Kyoto Imperial University and Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
http://www1.physik.tu-muenchen.de/~gammel/matpack/html/Chronics/physics_laureate
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Kungl. Vetenskapsakademien
Physics 1925
The prize for 1924: SIEGBAHN, KARL MANNE GEORG, Sweden, Uppsala University, "for his discoveries and research in the field of X-ray spectroscopy".
The prize for 1925: Reserved.
Physics 1926
The prize for 1925 was awarded jointly to: FRANCK, JAMES, Germany, Goettingen University, + 1964; and HERTZ, GUSTAV, Germany, Halle University, "for their discovery of the laws governing the impact of an electron upon an atom".
The prize for 1926: PERRIN, JEAN BAPTISTE, France, Sorbonne University, Paris, "for his work on the discontinuous structure of matter, and especially for his discovery of sedimentation equilibrium".
Physics 1927
The prize was divided equally between: COMPTON, ARTHUR HOLLY, U.S.A., Chicago University, "for his discovery of the effect named after him";
and WILSON, CHARLES THOMSON REES, Great Britain, Cambridge University, * 1869 (in Glencorse, Scotland), "for his method of making the paths of electrically charged particles visible by condensation of vapour".
Physics 1928
Reserved.

38. Japanese Nobel Laureates
SEARCH, CONTACT, PRINT, ENGLISH. JAPANESE nobel LAUREATES IN SCIENCE, nobelPrize in Physics 1949 hideki yukawa; 1965 Shinichiro Tomonaga; 1973 Leo Esaki.
http://www.eda.admin.ch/tokyo_emb/e/home/scite/japin/janob.html
Embassy of Switzerland - Tokyo SEARCH CONTACT PRINT ENGLISH JAPANESE NOBEL LAUREATES IN SCIENCE
Nobel Prize in Physics

Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
What's on?
Bilateral relations

Swiss Foreign Policy
...
For Swiss Researchers in Japan

39. Trends In Japan
Japanese nobel Laureates Year, Name, Type of award. 1949, hideki yukawa,physics. 1965, Shin'ichiro Tomonaga, physics. 1968, Yasunari Kawabata, literature.
http://www.jinjapan.org/trends00/honbun/tj010120.html

Top Picks
Back Numbers Search NINTH JAPANESE LAUREATE:
Hideki Shirakawa Wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry
January 19, 2001 Hideki Shirakawa and two others won a Nobel Prize for the discovery and development of conductive polymers. (PANA)
Hideki Shirakawa, a 64-year-old professor emeritus at the University of Tsukuba , has been named the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2000 . The prize was presented jointly to Shirakawa and two U.S. scientistsAlan Heeger, 64, of the University of California at Santa Barbara and Alan MacDiarmid, 73, of the University of Pennsylvaniafor their discovery and development of conductive polymers, or plastics that can transmit electric current. The three plan to split the award money totaling 9.0 million Swedish kronor (957,447 U.S. dollars at 9.4 krona to the dollar) among them equally. Shirakawa is the ninth Japanese to become a Nobel laureate and the first since Kenzaburo Oe, who won the prize for literature in 1994. He is the second Japanese to receive the chemistry award. The first was the late Ken'ichi Fukui, who won it in 1981. A Groundbreaking Discovery
Most plastics are polymers, substances whose molecules repeat their structure regularly. They were once believed to be high-quality insulators that, unlike metals, do not conduct electricity. Shirakawa and his colleagues discovered, however, that by changing their molecular structure plastics could be made electrically conductive. At the end of the 1970s, they succeeded in chemically treating a plastic film called polyacetylene and making it conductive. Following this, the field of conductive plastics evolved into an important research field among physicists as well as chemists.

40. TRADITION AND CULTURE: What Sort Of Japanese People Have Won Nobel Prizes?
Prizes? So far 12 Japanese people have won nobel Prizes. The firstwas hideki yukawa, who won the prize for physics in 1949. At
http://www.jinjapan.org/kidsweb/japan/d/q8.html
What sort of Japanese people have won Nobel Prizes? Eisaku Sato, who was prime minister of Japan for almost eight years from 1964 to 1972, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1974 for his contribution to Japan's diplomacy of peace and rejection of nuclear weapons. In the field of literature, Japan has produced two Nobel laureates. The first was Yasunari Kawabata, author of Snow Country and The Izu Dancer , who won the prize in 1968. The second was Kenzaburo Oe, whose novels include The Silent Cry and A Personal Matter ; he received the award in 1994.

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