Nobel Prizes In Physics USA) 1969 M. GellMann (USA) 1970 H. Alfvén (Sweden) L 1971 D. Gabor (United Kingdom)1972 john Bardeen (USA W. Anderson (USA) Jv vleck (USA) Neville F. Mott http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_physik_e.html
Extractions: (Information not checked) (Germany, 1845-03-27 - 1923-02-10) Discovery of X rays Hendrik A. Lorentz (Netherlands, 1853-07-18 - 1929-02-04) Pieter Zeeman (Netherlands, 1865-05-25 - 1943-10-09) Henri A. Becquerel (France, 1852-12-15 - 1908-08-25) Marie Curie (France, Poland, 1867-11-07 - 1934-07-04) Pierre Curie (France, 1859-05-15 - 1906-04-19) Discovery of radioactivity Lord Rayleigh (United Kingdom) Philipp E. Lenard (Germany, 1862-06-07 - 1947-05-20) Joseph J. Thomson (United Kingdom, 1856-12-18 - 1940-04-30) Conduction of electricity in gases Albert A. Michelson (USA, 1852-12-19 - 1931-05-09) Measurement of the speed of light G. Lippmann (France) Karl Ferdinand Braun (Germany, 1850-06-06 - 1918-04-20) Guglielmo Marconi (Italy, 1874-04-25 - 1937-07-20) wireless telegraphy Johann D. van der Waals (Netherlands, 1837-11-23 - 1923-03-07) Molecular forces Wilhelm Wien (Germany, 1864-01-13 - 1928-08-30) Heat radiation (Sweden) H. Kamerlingh Onnes (Netherlands) Max von Laue (Germany, 1879-10-09 - 1960-04-24)
University News Service Michelle Brekke, NASA flight director Deke Slayton, astronaut. nobel laureates. JohnH. van vleck, faculty, Institute of Technology, 192428. Physics, 1977. http://www1.umn.edu/urelate/newsservice/famous.html
Extractions: Famous Alumni and Faculty The following is a work in progress, a short list of the U's better-known alumni and facultynames or achievements that most people would recognize. If you know a famous U of M alum or faculty member who isn't on this list, please let us know , and tell us the details. But please keep in mind that this is not intended to be a comprehensive list of all the achievements, awards and recognition earned by U of M faculty and alumnijust a short list of the universally recognized. Arts and Literature
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-xii 1 The Question of Genius, pp. 1-7 2 Roots, pp. 8-27 3 To Be an Engineer, pp. 28-44 4 A Graduate Student's Paradise, pp. 45-65 5 Many-Body Beginnings, pp. 66-82 6 Academic Life, pp. 83-98 7 Engineering for National Defense, pp. 99-114 8 The Transistor, pp. 115-141 9 The Break from Bell, pp. 142-164 10 Homecoming, pp. 165-189 11 Cracking the Riddle of Superconductivity, pp. 190-218 12 Two Nobels Are Better Than One Hole in One, pp. 219-240 13 A Hand in Industry, pp. 241-253 14 Citizen of Science, pp. 254-283 15 Pins and Needles and Waves, pp. 284-300 16 Last Journey, pp. 301-313 17 Epilogue: True Genius and How to Cultivate It, pp. 314-330 Bibliography, pp. 331-358 Acknowledgements, pp. 359-362 Notes, pp. 363-444 Index, pp. 445-468 Photo Plates, pp. 469-476
Nat'l Academies Press, True Genius: (2002), Index Abigail, 204 van vleck, Edward, 32 van vleck, john, 3, 7 Von Karman, Theodore, 260von Neumann, john, 4951 Walter, Maila, 73, 75 Walter H. Brattain Lectureship http://www.nap.edu/books/0309084083/html/445.html
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-xii 1 The Question of Genius, pp. 1-7 2 Roots, pp. 8-27 3 To Be an Engineer, pp. 28-44 4 A Graduate Student's Paradise, pp. 45-65 5 Many-Body Beginnings, pp. 66-82 6 Academic Life, pp. 83-98 7 Engineering for National Defense, pp. 99-114 8 The Transistor, pp. 115-141 9 The Break from Bell, pp. 142-164 10 Homecoming, pp. 165-189 11 Cracking the Riddle of Superconductivity, pp. 190-218 12 Two Nobels Are Better Than One Hole in One, pp. 219-240 13 A Hand in Industry, pp. 241-253 14 Citizen of Science, pp. 254-283 15 Pins and Needles and Waves, pp. 284-300 16 Last Journey, pp. 301-313 17 Epilogue: True Genius and How to Cultivate It, pp. 314-330 Bibliography, pp. 331-358 Acknowledgements, pp. 359-362 Notes, pp. 363-444 Index, pp. 445-468 Photo Plates, pp. 469-476
Lunar Crater Statistics vanvleck. 1.9S. 78.3E. 31. john Monroe; American astronomer, mathematician (1833-1912). .van-Wijk. 96. Ernest H.; Americanphysicist (1906-1968). Vetchinkin. http://lunar.arc.nasa.gov/science/atlas/text/cratertex_v.html
Extractions: A B C D ... Main Menu Latin Name Lat Long Diam Origin Vaisala Yrjo; Finnish astronomer (1891-1971). Valier Max; German rocketry engineer (1895-1930). Van-Albada Gale Bruno; Dutch astronomer (1912-1972). Van-Biesbroeck George A.; Belgian-American astronomer (1880-1974). Van-Maanen Adriaan; Dutch-American astronomer (1884-1946). Van-Vleck "John Monroe; American astronomer, mathematician (1833-1912)." Van-Wijk Uco; Dutch-Americanastronomer (1924-1966). Van-de Graaff Robert J.; Americanphysicist (1901-1967).
John Clarke Slater Papers1908-1976 Howarth, DJ; Jaeger, Zeev; johnson, Keith H. Koster, George F 1908; Ufford, CharlesWilbur, 1900-; Vallarta, Manuel Sandoval; van vleck, JH (john Hasbrouck), 1899 http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/s/slater.htm
Extractions: (81 linear feet) B S12p American Philosophical Society 105 South Fifth Street Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 Table of contents Abstract Return to MOLE: APS Manuscripts On Line Return to APS library Return to APS home Background note: Slater served as chair of the Department of Physics until 1952, when he was appointed MIT's first Institute Professor and Harry B. Higgins chair, allowing him even greater latitude in pressing his interdisciplinary agenda. After a year spent at Brookhaven Laboratories, he returned to MIT to help establish the renowned group in solid state and molecular theory and the interdisciplinary Center for Materials Science and Engineering, the Research Laboratory of Electronics, and the Laboratory for Nuclear Science. The new perspectives on materials science emanating from these groups was instrumental in the development of the transistor, in part through the doctoral work of one of Slater's best known students, William Shockley. After Slater retired from MIT in 1966, he was hired by the University of Florida as Graduate Research Professor of Physics and Chemistry, remaining active at both institutions until his death in 1976. Slater's voluminous publications include several key works in shaping the several fields in which worked, including
John Bragg consultant firm. Dr. Bragg worked under nobel Laureate john H. VanVleck for his doctoral dissertation at Harvard. He experienced http://www.phys.unca.edu/faculty/bragg.html
Extractions: John Bragg (1919-2000) was an adjunct faculty member at UNCA from 1994 to 2000. He taught the general-education five-hour physics course and upper-level thermal physics during these years. His former activities included teaching at Cornell, research for the Government, and work at General Electric and the Singer Corporation. Dr. Bragg's career also included innovative development of a consultant firm. Dr. Bragg worked under Nobel Laureate John H. Van Vleck for his doctoral dissertation at Harvard. He experienced first hand a quantum field theory course under Nobel Laureate Julian Schwinger (co-developer of quantum field theory) in the late 1940s. After receiving his Ph.D. from Harvard, he became the theorist in the Department of Chemistry at Cornell. He was hired by Nobel Laureate Peter Debye. At Cornell, he met Nobel Laureate Richard Feynman, who asked Bragg to give a seminar. Dr. Bragg shared personal stories of his interactions with the physicists mentioned above during a very special seminar at UNCA, the semester before his death.
Physics Nobel Laureates 1975 - Today The first nobel prize in physics was awarded to Wilhelm Röntgen in 1901. VANVLECK, john H., USA, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, * 1899, + 1980 http://www1.physik.tu-muenchen.de/~gammel/matpack/html/Chronics/physics_laureate
Extractions: (Kungl. Vetenskapsakademien) The prize was awarded jointly to: BOHR, AAGE, Denmark, Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, MOTTELSON, BEN, Denmark, Nordita, Copenhagen, * 1926 (in Chicago, U.S.A.); and RAINWATER, JAMES, U.S.A., Columbia University, New York, NY, "for the discovery of the connection between collective motion and particle motion in atomic nuclei and the development of the theory of the structure of the atomic nucleus based on this connection". The prize was divided equally between: RICHTER, BURTON, U.S.A., Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, CA, TING, SAMUEL C. C., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, (European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), "for their pioneering work in the discovery of a heavy elementary particle of a new kind". The prize was divided equally between: ANDERSON, PHILIP W., U.S.A., Bell Laboratories,Murray Hill, NJ, MOTT, Sir NEVILL F., Great Britain, Cambridge University, Cambridge
Robert S. Mulliken - Wikipedia able to associate with many future Nobelists J. Robert Oppenheimer, john H. VanVleck, and Harold C He also met john C. Slater, who had worked with Niels Bohr http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_S._Mulliken
Extractions: Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Page history Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk Log in Help From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Robert Sanderson Mulliken June 7 October 31 ) was an American physicist and chemist , primarily responsible for the elaboration of the molecular orbital method of computing the structure of molecules Mulliken was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts . His father, Samuel Parsons Mulliken, was a professor of organic chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). As a child, Robert Mulliken learned the name and botanical classification of plants and, in general, had an excellent, but selective, memory. For example, he learned German well enough to skip the course in scientific German in college, but could not remember the name of his high school German teacher. He also made the acquaintance, while still a child, of the physical chemist
¹Ý ºí·º The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://preview.britannica.co.kr/spotlights/nobel/list/B08b3870a.html
Extractions: Alfred B. Nobel (1833-1896), scienziato e inventore svedese, lasciò in eredità alla fondazione omonima 9 milioni di dollari, i cui interessi vengono ripartiti ogni anno, dal 1901, tra coloro i quali si distinguono maggiormente in opere che promuovono il progresso umano nei campi della Fisica, della Chimica, della Medicina, della Letteratura e della Pace. Il primo premio Nobel per lEconomia (denominato "Premio alla memoria di Alfred Nobel") fu assegnato, a spese del governo svedese, nel 1969. I premi Nobel non furono assegnati negli anni omessi dallelenco. Il premio ammonta a un miliardo e 600 milioni di lire.