Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Chu Steven
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 100    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Chu Steven:     more books (42)
  1. Laser Physics at the Limits
  2. Laser Spectroscopy
  3. Solidification 1998: Proceedings of Symposia Sponsored by the Solidification Committee of the Materials Design and Manufacturing Division of Tms, Held at the Tms Fall
  4. William Daniel Phillips: Laser Cooling, Bose-Einstein Condensate, Nobel Prize in Physics, Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Steven Chu
  5. Members of the Optical Society of America: Robert Curl, Zhores Alferov, Wolfgang Ketterle, Carl Wieman, Eric Allin Cornell, Steven Chu
  6. United States Department of Commerce: Economic Growth, United States Department of Commerce and Labor, Gary Locke, Steven Chu, Eric Shinseki
  7. Energieminister (Vereinigte Staaten): Steven Chu, Bill Richardson, James R. Schlesinger, Hazel R. O'leary, James Burrows Edwards (German Edition)
  8. Let's welcome another fan of nuclear power!(THE LAST WORD)(Secretary Steven Chu of the Department of Energy): An article from: The New American by John F. McManus, 2009-10-12
  9. Ethnic Chinese Nobel Laureates: Charles K. Kao, Roger Y. Tsien, Steven Chu, Gao Xingjian, Tsung-Dao Lee, Yuan T. Lee, Chen Ning Yang
  10. University of Rochester Alumni: Bruce Schneier, Francis Bellamy, George Abbott, Steven Chu, John William Miller, Debra Jo Rupp, Daniel Peterson
  11. United States Secretaries of Energy: United States Secretary of Energy, Hazel R. O'leary, Bill Richardson, James R. Schlesinger, Steven Chu
  12. Chinese American Politicians: Elaine Chao, Ed Jew, Steven Chu, Harry Lee, Leland Yee, David Wu, Gary Locke, Daniel Akaka, Judy Chu
  13. Membre Du Cabinet Du Président Barack Obama: Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert Gates, Eric Shinseki, Tom Vilsack, Steven Chu, Timothy Geithner (French Edition)
  14. Climate Change Environmentalists: Al Gore, Al Gore and the Environment, George Monbiot, Steven Chu, Tim Flannery, Bill Mckibben, Eban Goodstein

61. Steven FangCheng Chu S Webpage
steven FangCheng chu s Webpage. Personal Introduction MEM800 GUIBased Control Project MEM800 GUI-Based Control Project Final Exam ..VB Script.
http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~fcc23/

62. MD Boys Distance
chu, steven 10, 4, 28.22, 12, River Hill chu, steven 10, 10, 12.80, 37, River Hill. Styczynski, Mike 10, 10, 15.60, 38, River Hill
http://www.dyestat.com/9in/preview/9retmd18.html
DyeStat 1999 indoor DyeStat Page 1 Search 99 indoor
1999 Returning Athletes
Maryland Boys - Distance
Name / 98 grade Min Sec School 800 Meters Hughes, Shannon 10 Suitland Zobonica, Josh 11 Stephen Decatur Kent, Paul 11 Bowie Najjar, Ali 11 Northwestern-Pg Thomas, Zach 11 Thomas Johnson Shresha, Robbie 10 Paint Branch Aaron, Jason 11 Bladensburg Rolland, Michael 11 Broadneck Harrison, Donald 11 Eleanor Roosevelt Van Tine, Jarrett 10 Bethesda Chevy Chase Hemming, Andrew 10 Dematha Edwards, Bernie 11 Severna Park Ohia, Nkem 11 Wilde Lake Ward, Justin 12 Frederick Thillet, Victor 10 Old Mill Santucci, Jason 11 Westminster McKinley, Johnavin 11 No. Hagerstown Kridler, Nick 11 Middletown Albertine, Jamie 10 Whitman 1600 Meters Palavecino, Matias 11 Watkins Mill Van Tine, Jarrett 10 Bethesda Chevy Chase Thillet, Victor 10 Old Mill Rogers, Andy 11 Annapolis Chu, Steven 10 River Hill Day, Shawn 11 Thomas Johnson Hunt, Carlos 10 Westlake Glynn, David 11 Walter Johnson Albertine, Jamie 10 Whitman Mitchell, Jason 11 Towson Davis, Josh 10 Westminster Allen, Doug 10 Walkersville Morris, Ben 11

63. 06/08/2001 Nobel Laureate Steven Chu Lectures At HKUST Nobel Prize
Nobel Laureate steven chu Lectures at HKUST. Nobel Prizewinning physicist steven chu gave a lecture today (6 August 2001) on Biology at the Single
http://www.ust.hk/en/pa/e_pa010806-57.html
Nobel Laureate Steven Chu Lectures at HKUST
Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Chu gave a lecture today (6 August 2001) on "Biology at the Single Molecule Level" at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST).
Prof Chu is the Theodore and Frances Geballe Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University. He flew in to Hong Kong to deliver HKUST's Distinguished Lecture in Science 2001, one of the major academic events celebrating the 10th anniversary of the University. His talk focused on the major recent developments in the study of single biological molecules.
Prof Chu was awarded the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly with Prof Claude Cohen-Tannoudji of France and Prof William D Phillips of the US for the development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light.
He is famed for his invention of "optical molasses", a method which uses strong laser beams to slow individual atoms down from a typical speed of 4,000 kilometers per hour to speeds of less than a tenth of a kilometer per hour, cooling the atoms down to very low temperatures just above absolute zero (-273oC). This powerful technique has enabled scientists to obtain precise measurements of the properties of atoms, and has increased scientific understanding about the interplay of light and matter. The research earned him a share of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Building on this work, Prof Chu used laser beams to trap microscopic particles in water. This breakthrough allows him to study and manipulate single strands of polymers, DNA and other biological molecules one at a time.

64. Nobel Laureate Steven Chu Lectures At HKUST
Nobel Prizewinning physicist steven chu gave a lecture today (6 August 2001) on Biology at the Single Molecule Level at the Hong Kong University of
http://www.ust.hk/~webopa/news/2001_News/news0806.html
Press Release 6 August 2001 Nobel Laureate Steven Chu Lectures at HKUST Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Chu gave a lecture today (6 August 2001) on "Biology at the Single Molecule Level" at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST). Prof Chu is the Theodore and Frances Geballe Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University. He flew in to Hong Kong to deliver HKUST's Distinguished Lecture in Science 2001, one of the major academic events celebrating the 10 th anniversary of the University. His talk focused on the major recent developments in the study of single biological molecules. Prof Chu was awarded the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly with Prof Claude Cohen-Tannoudji of France and Prof William D Phillips of the US for the development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light. He is famed for his invention of "optical molasses", a method which uses strong laser beams to slow individual atoms down from a typical speed of 4,000 kilometers per hour to speeds of less than a tenth of a kilometer per hour, cooling the atoms down to very low temperatures just above absolute zero (-273 o C). This powerful technique has enabled scientists to obtain precise measurements of the properties of atoms, and has increased scientific understanding about the interplay of light and matter. The research earned him a share of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics.

65. Steven Chu

http://www.newsday.com/ny-lotcchu,0,4141790.acrobat

66. PBK - Fellows Lecturer 2004-2005
steven chu, Stanford University. AVAILABLE In accordance with requests, 20042005. steven chu is the Theodore and Frances Geballe Professor of Physics and
http://www.pbk.org/advocacy/visitscholar/Chu.htm

Home
Advocacy Programs Visiting Barber Visiting Scholar Program Fellows Lectureship
STEVEN CHU Stanford University AVAILABLE : In accordance with requests, 2004-2005.
General Information
Advocacy Programs Publications Members Only ... Home
Please see Trademark Notice

67. Nobel Physicist Steven Chu 1/6 | Asian American Innovators | GOLDSEA
Nobel Physicist steven chu 1/6 Asian American Innovators GOLDSEA.
http://goldsea.com/Innovators/Chus/chus.html
Steven Chu
Nobel Physicist
The laser-cooling technology devised by Nobel Laureate Steven Chu will let us build instruments that exploit quantum precision to attain unparalleled sensitivity.
by William Nakayama
PAGE 1 OF 6 GOLDSEA ASIAMS.NET ASIAN AMERICAN INNOVATORS Steven Chu
Laser Super-Cooler obel-Prize winning physicists are different from you and me. They have more brains. Those of us who fall on the big part of the bell curve are curious about the mental processes of heavyweight brainiacs. Do they dream in mathematical equations? What kinds of thoughts fill their waking moments? Do they watch TV? Do they have favorite cereals?
We tracked down Steven Chu at home near Stanford University where he is a professor of applied physics. He spends part of his time teaching quantum mechanics to graduate students but devotes the better part of his energies to techniques for controlling and studying matter at the atomic level. CONTINUED BELOW
Chu's most famous work the work that won him the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics has centered on cooling and trapping sodium atoms. It recognized him for pioneering a novel technique for cooling them down to 240-millionth of a degree above absolute zero. What takes the feat beyond ordinary comprehension is how it was done: by firing an array of six lasers at the target atoms.
To try to diminish the energy of atoms by bombarding them with beams of electromagnetic energy is totally counter-intuitive to anyone with a smattering of physics knowledge. But hardcore physicists like Chu know that matter and energy follow different rules on the atomic level. While ordinary objects appear to absorb energy along an uninterrupted continuum, individual atoms are governed by the laws of quantum mechanics which restrict energy changes to discrete jumps. Chu ingeniously exploited Doppler shifts in wavelengths produced by moving objects to create what he calls an "optical molasses" effect. The lasers are tuned to a wavelength which, when doppler-shifted, can be absorbed by atoms moving toward the laser, thereby progressively slowing them until most of their kinetic energy has been lost. The laser has no effect on atoms with little motion along the laser's axis.

68. Berkeley Groks - Steven Chu Interview: Physics Of Trapping Atoms And Biomolecule
Professor steven chu. Professor steven chu ? Professor , Department of Physics, Stanford Nobel Laureate, Physics 1997 Biography Website
http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~frank/BerkeleyGroks_Chu.htm
Berkeley Groks Home Transcripts Upcoming Episodes Previous Episodes ... Producers Physics of Trapping Atoms and Biomolecules
February 25, 2004 Professor Steven Chu
Professor , Department of Physics, Stanford
Nobel Laureate, Physics 1997
Biography
Website One of the fundamental problems of studying gas atoms is that they move too quickly, but many methods have now been developed to cool these atoms and trap them for later observation. Joining us on Berkeley Groks to discuss these methods is Professor Steven Chu from Stanford University . Professor Chu's work spans many realms of physics from observing individual biomolecules to the laser trapping of atoms, techniques for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997. He was recently at Berkeley visiting as one of the many prestigious Hitchcock lecturers Steve Chu ( SC ) joins Charles Lee ( CL ) on Berkeley Groks to discuss cooling atoms and holding on the biomolecules.
CL: Professor Chu, thank you very much for joining us today on Berkeley Groks. SC: My pleasure.

69. Consulate General Of Sweden - Nobel Laureate Steven Chu At The Commonwealth Club
Nobel Laureate steven chu at the Commonwealth Club. The Commonwealth Club of California will feature A Conversation with Professor steven chu On the
http://www.swedenabroad.com/pages/general____35369.asp
Svenska Thursday 15 Sep 2005 8:05 AM GMT +1 Home Contact us Sweden Abroad Sweden.se Navigation The Consulate General
Address Book

News

Calendar
...
Links

Print version Nobel Laureate Steven Chu at the Commonwealth Club The Commonwealth Club of California will feature "A Conversation with Professor Steven Chu: "On the Nobel Prize, Managing Science, and Solving the World Energy Crisis. Dr. Chu is director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997 for "for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light".
Thursday, July 21 at 6.30 PM
The Commonwealth Club of California
595 Market Street
San Francisco
The Commonwealth Club of California
Print version Content: Nobel Literature Book Club Nobel Film Series Nobel Lecture Series: The Nature of Scientific Discovery The Nobel Prize: 100+Years of Extraordinary Literature ... The Nobel Tradition at UC Berkeley

70. Der Nobelpreis Für Physik: Steven Chu

http://www.nobelpreis.org/physik/chu.htm
vor
suchen
Home Chemie ... Wirtschaft Steven Chu
(USA) "Für ihre Entwicklung von Methoden zum Kühlen und Einfangen von Atomen mit Hilfe von Laserlicht"
( gemeinsam mit Claude Cohen-Tannoudji und William Daniel Phillips

71. Hertz Foundation: Home
steven chu Director, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory A Nobel Prizewinning scholar and international expert in atomic physics, laser spectroscopy,
http://www.hertzfndn.org/chu.shtml
Foundation Info Home Awards Eligibility Fields Schools Application References History Commitment Thesis Prize Board of Directors Contact Us How You Can Help
Events NEW Symposium Video Clip A Special Event "Catalyzing the Future" A Fannie and John Hertz Foundation Symposium March 18-20, 2005 2004 Scholars Retreat
What's New Dream beam
Nature Cover by: Cameron Geddes 2004 Thesis Prize Winner: Youssef Marzouk
Donations Giving to the Hertz Foundation
Links NSF ASEE - NDSEG
"Catalyzing the Future"
Steven Chu
Director, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
A Nobel Prize-winning scholar and international expert in atomic physics, laser spectroscopy, biophysics and polymer physics, Dr. Steven Chu currently oversees the Department of Energy’s multi-program research laboratories. Most recently, Dr. Chu was the Theodore and Francis Gabelle Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University, a position he held for 17 years. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, American Philosophical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Chu received his AB and BS in Physics from the University of Rochester (1970), and PhD in Physics from the University of California at Berkeley (1976).

72. Biography Of Chu, Steven
Biographies of people living and dead of all nations.
http://www.allbiographies.com/biography-StevenChu-7028.html
search biography names match all words
match any words
use wildcards browse biographies get a new biography
browse by name

browse by year

online dictionary allmath.com
math for students

travel deals

hotel rooms

biography classifications major works cross references biography name: Chu, Steven
sex: male lived: biography: browse by name A B C D ... Z browse by year 2700 - 691 BC 690 - 531 BC 530 - 481 BC 480 - 391 BC ... Allsites LLC

73. Steven Chu: A Scientist's Random Walk
Our guest today is steven chu, who is a Nobel Laureate in Physics and Geballe Professor of Physics at Stanford. He is the 2004 Hitchcock Lecturer on the
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iis/video/05/
Steven Chu: A Scientist's Random Walk
Harry Kreisler

View the Program
(RealAudio) - February 13, 2004 Tell a colleague about it. There is no PDF file available for download. Please Note : The California Digital Library's (CDL) commitment to provide persistent access to content in the eScholarship Repository applies only to material housed on servers maintained directly or under contract by the CDL. Links and access to content of any format referenced outside the eScholarship Repository cannot be guaranteed by the CDL or eScholarship Repository. ABSTRACT:
Our guest today is Steven Chu, who is a Nobel Laureate in Physics and Geballe Professor of Physics at Stanford. He is the 2004 Hitchcock Lecturer on the Berkeley campus. SUGGESTED CITATION:
Harry Kreisler, "Steven Chu: A Scientist's Random Walk" (February 13, 2004). Institute of International Studies. Conversations with History: Nobel Laureates' Gallery . Video Recording 05.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iis/video/05 HOME SEARCH HELP MY ACCOUNT ... SEARCH MELVYL

74. Better Living--and Smarter Rats--through Chemistry | Perspectives | CNET News.co
steven chu, director, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The future is also not all fun and gadgets. The world s oil production may peak by 2007 or
http://news.com.com/Better living--and smarter rats--through chemistry/2010-7337
CNET News.com
CNET tech sites: Track thousands of Web sites in one place: Newsburst
Special Reports
Newsmakers Perspectives
Better livingand smarter ratsthrough chemistry
November 10, 2004, 4:00 AM PT By Michael Kanellos
TrackBack Print E-mail TalkBack
Some day, humans may plant a chip in their head to help them remember where they put the car keys. A group of researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany, have devised a specially designed chip that can stimulate or monitor brain tissue when placed under it. A synapse fires, and a corresponding spike in voltage occurs in the adjacent chip. Alternatively, electricity courses through the chip, and chemical synapses fire in the brain tissue. So far, the group has only used the technology to study the reactions of snail neurons, sections of rat brain and a few other types of nerve cells. The group is not close at all to delivering a productbut the technology creates the possibility that the movements of mind can be mapped (or guided) by computers. If you want to get a glimpse of the future, a conference is the place to be.

75. APS Chair
steven chu is the Theodore and Frances Geballe Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University. Professor chu s research is primarily in
http://www.apscenttalks.org/chair.cfm?sessID=32

76. _?
On Oct. l5. l997, Mr. steven chu won the Nobel Prize for physics for the year l997 steven chu is the fifth overseas Chinese Nobel Prize winner after Mr.
http://edu.sina.com.cn/en/2002-08-12/4868.html

77. Physics Department
Dr. steven chu Professor of Physics, Stanford University 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics. Public Lecture. Laser cooling and trapping from atomic clocks to
http://www.uark.edu/depts/physics/maurer2002.html

The Robert D. Maurer Lecture Series
Dr. Steven Chu
Professor of Physics, Stanford University
1997 Nobel Prize in Physics Public Lecture Laser cooling and trapping: from atomic clocks to watching biomolecules move, one molecule at a time Giffels Auditorium, Old Main
7:30-8:30 pm, Thursday, March 28, 2002
Professor Chu, a Nobel Laureate in physics, will review how atoms can be cooled with lasers to temperatures of 200 billionths of a degree above absolute zero. Once chilled to these temperatures, atoms can be held and manipulated with light. Some of the applications of this new technology include the construction of ultra-precise atomic clocks, atom interferometers, and the achievement of Bose Condensation. Finally, he will show how this work has led us to study the behavior of individual bio-molecules and bio-molecular systems in real time. The lecture is part of the annual Maurer Lecture Series. It is free and open to the public. The purpose of the lecture is to bring distinguished scienetists and educators to the campus and to the general public to increase awareness of recent scientific advances. The public lecture will be followed by a colloquium on Friday, March 29, 4:00-5:00 pm in Physics 133. The colloquium topic will be "Biology at the single molecule level".

78. Dhcenergy-s05: Nobelist Steven Chu Speaks On Alternative Energy
according to steven chu, director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and winner of the 1997 Nobel prize for physics. Oil and
http://listproc.ucdavis.edu/class/200503/dhcenergy-s05/0018.html
Nobelist Steven Chu speaks on alternative energy, biophysics
From: jkwok@ucdavis.edu
Date: Sat May 07 2005 - 12:27:05 PDT
  • Next message: naabrams@ucdavis.edu: "NYTimes.com: Old Foes Soften to New Reactors" This is very relevant to what we're working on and it's a great opportunity to hear from a Nobel laureate so it'd be great if some of us could make it there and possibly share some insights with the class on Wednesday.
    Joyce
    University of California, Davis
    May 6, 2005
    NOBELIST STEVEN CHU SPEAKS ON ALTERNATIVE ENERGY, BIOPHYSICS
    Biology can play a big role in solving future energy problems,
    according to Steven Chu, director of the Lawrence Berkeley National
    Laboratory and winner of the 1997 Nobel prize for physics. Oil and
    gas supplies will run short within a few decades, causing a
    monumental crisis if alternatives are not found. Chu thinks that a combination of biological and synthetic nanostructures could be used to mimic the process of photosynthesis, which plants use to turn
  • 79. News Item
    NOBEL LAUREATE steven chu (UR Physics BS 1970) NAMED DIRECTOR OF LAWRENCE We are delighted that Dr. steven chu, a Nobel laureate, is returning to the
    http://spider.pas.rochester.edu:8080/wwwPAS/PASforms/news/newsReader$0000555
    Saturday, June 19, 2004 NOBEL LAUREATE STEVEN CHU (UR Physics BS 1970) NAMED DIRECTOR OF LAWRENCE BERKELEY NATIONAL LABORATORY See: LBL and other News Releases http://www.lbl.gov/ http://www.ucop.edu/news/archives/2004/jun17.htm http://www.interactions.org/cms/?pid=1013036 http://www.lanl.gov/orgs/pa/newsbulletin/2004/06/18/text02.shtml ... http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/8949025.htm?1c NOBEL LAUREATE STEVEN CHU NAMED DIRECTOR OF LAWRENCE BERKELEY NATIONAL LABORATORY The University of California Board of Regents today (June 17) named Steven Chu, professor in the physics and applied physics departments at Stanford University and a co-winner of the Nobel Prize in physics, as director of the UC-managed Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Acting on the recommendation of UC President Robert C. Dynes and approval of Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, the regents appointed Chu the sixth director of the Berkeley laboratory during a special meeting conducted by telephone conference call. Chu will take office August 1, replacing departing director Charles V. Shank. Shank will take a sabbatical and then return to the UC Berkeley campus to continue teaching and research. "Steve Chu brings to this position outstanding leadership qualities and a record of superior achievement in science," Dynes said. "His combination of skills is precisely what we need to keep the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at the forefront of scientific excellence and to guide the lab wisely through the upcoming potential contract competition." Chu, who earned his doctorate from UC Berkeley, is currently the Theodore and Francis Geballe Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford, where he has been on the faculty since 1987.

    80. Steven Chu - Chinese-American Physicist [1p.1n] - Gallery - Muzi.com
    ChineseAmerican physicist steven chu 1997 Nobel Laureate in Physics for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light click to open
    http://gallery.muzi.com/pfg/english/1001415.shtml
    Public Version Premium Version Subscribe Premium ... Japan
    updated: 2005-09-14 Search Photo
    Single
    Group
    Guides Gallery Home
    Rankings

    What's New

    Top Categories Military
    Models

    Actors

    Movies
    ... Universities Jiu Zhai Gou Forest Park The Great Wall Current Events Year 2005 Year 2004 Year 2003 Year 2002 ... Year 1998 2005 Lien Chan Visit to China 2005 Shanghai Auto Expo Hot Stars Bai Ling Lin Chiling Muzi.com Muzi (English) Gallery Science ... GB Steven Chu - Chinese-American physicist [1p.1n] Chinese-American physicist Steven Chu: 1997 Nobel Laureate in Physics for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light click to open Muzi Sites M-News M-Search M-Gallery M-Library Beststar M-Movies Chinastar Community My Muzi Join Community Our Home HomePages M-Forum M-Salon M-Love M-Poll Join My Muzi eHome eBox eBuddy eWeb eBuilder eNews eStar Join Muzi.com About Sitemap Friendsite ... Contact

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-80 of 100    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter