Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Esaki Leo
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 105    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 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  

         Esaki Leo:     more detail
  1. Highlights in Condensed Matter Physics and Future Prospects (NATO Science Series B: Physics)
  2. 10th International Symposium on Nanostructures: Physics and Technology (Proceedings of Spie)
  3. United States and Japan - Think New York [In Japanese Language] by Reona Esaki, Leo Esaki, 1980
  4. Large Scale Integrated Technology: State of the Art and Prospects (NATO Science Series E: (closed))
  5. Universitaire Japonais: Tetsuya Théodore Fujita, Kitaro Nishida, Okakura Kakuzo, Yukichi Fukuzawa, Kiyoshi Ito, Keiiti Aki, Leo Esaki (French Edition)
  6. Physicien Japonais: Hideki Yukawa, Sumio Iijima, Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, Toshihide Maskawa, Makoto Kobayashi, Leo Esaki, Masatoshi Koshiba (French Edition)
  7. Träger Des Japan-Preises: Benoît Mandelbrot, Tim Berners-Lee, Leo Esaki, Gerhard Ertl, Peter Grünberg, Marvin Minsky, Willem Kolff, Bruce Ames (German Edition)
  8. Connecting to the 21st century: Educational reform in Japan and reflections on global culture : a transcript of the speech presented by Leo Esaki February 20, 2001 (Weatherhead Policy Forum report) by Reona Esaki, 2001
  9. Creative Parenting Trained People Japanese Language Book by Leo Esaki, 1997
  10. SILICON SUBSTRATES: Powerful Interband Diode Developed.: An article from: Electronic Materials Update

81. Nat' Academies Press, True Genius: The Life And Science Of John Bardeen (2002)
esaki, leo, 230–231. Eugenics, 2, 163, 273. European Committee on Crime Problems,272. European Workshop on Charge Density Waves, 296
http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309084083/html/452.html
Read more than 3,000 books online FREE! More than 900 PDFs now available for sale HOME ABOUT NAP CONTACT NAP HELP ... ORDERING INFO Items in cart [0] TRY OUR SPECIAL DISCOVERY ENGINE Questions? Call 888-624-8373 True Genius: The Life and Science of John Bardeen (2002)
Joseph Henry Press ( JHP
Find More Like

This Book
Research ...
Dashboard
NEW!
BUY This Book

CHAPTER SELECTOR:
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

82. Active Skim View Of: Index
190, 198–199, 210–211, 214, 216 Entropy principle, 156 esaki diode, 230 esaki,leo, 230–231 Eugenics, 2, 163, 273 European Committee on Crime Problems,
http://www.nap.edu/nap-cgi/skimit.cgi?isbn=0309084083&chap=445-468

83. Golem.de - Lexikon
Translate this page Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel leo esaki aus der freien EnzyklopädieWikipedia und steht unter der GNU Lizenz für freie Dokumentation.
http://lexikon.golem.de/Leo_Esaki
News Forum Archiv Markt ... Impressum Lexikon-Suche Lizenz Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Leo Esaki aus der freien Enzyklopädie Wikipedia und steht unter der GNU Lizenz für freie Dokumentation . In der Wikipedia ist eine Liste der Autoren verfügbar, dort kann man den Artikel bearbeiten Letzte Meldungen Scoopt vermarktet Hobby-Fotos wichtiger Ereignisse Xbox 360 kommt am 2. Dezember 2005 ... Originalartikel
Lexikon: Leo Esaki
Leo Esaki jap. Esaki Reona in ) ist ein japanischer Physiker . Bekannt wurde er durch die Erfindung der Esaki-Diode Esaki studierte Physik auf der und machte seinen Bachelor of Science seinen Doktortitel . Leo Esaki erhielt zusammen mit Ivar Giaever den Physik Nobelpreis in Halb - beziehungsweise Supraleitern betrafen. Er arbeitete auch in Tsukuba
Personendaten
NAME Esaki, Leo ALTERNATIVNAMEN KURZBESCHREIBUNG japanischer Physiker GEBURTSDATUM GEBURTSORT STERBEDATUM STERBEORT
Englische Wikipedia: Leo Esaki

Die Inhalte unter lexikon.golem.de entstammen der freien Enzyklopädie Wikipedia und wurden von ihren Autoren unter der GNU Lizenz für freie Dokumentation veröffentlicht. Die einzelnen Wikipedia-Artikel sind als solche gekennzeichnet.

84. Innovation And Evolution Reflections On A Life In Science
From the esaki Tunnel Diode to Semiconductor Superlattices and Quantum Wells.leo esaki. University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305, Japan
http://qhxb.lib.tsinghua.edu.cn/english/98n1/980106.html

85. A Negative Differential Resistance Oscillator With A Negistor
This NDR effect in semiconductors has been discovered by leo esaki, The Tunneldiode has been patented by leo esaki US4198644Tunnel diode by esaki;
http://jlnlabs.imars.com/cnr/negosc.htm
A N egative D ifferential R esistance Oscillator with a Negistor Created on 06-09-01 - JLN Labs - Last update 06-16-01
All informations in this page are published free and are intended for private/educational purposes and not for commercial applications You will find below a very simple experiment that anyone can perform with few and cheap electronic components. This experiment will demonstrate you how a very simple oscillator can be built with a component which shows a N egative D ifferential R esistance ( NDR ) effect when it is used properly. There is no overunity effect here but this device is worth to be known because in this case the NDR component used does not seem to agree with the basic Ohm's Law : According to the Ohm's law an increase of the voltage produces an increase of the current, in this case, in the negative resistance region of the NDR characteristic curve, an increase of the voltage produces a decrease of the current. This NDR effect in semiconductors has been discovered by Leo Esaki , he has been awarded a Nobel Prize in 1973 for his discovery of the Tunnel Effect used in the Tunnel diode. A

86. Rev. Mod. Phys. 46, 237 (1974): Esaki - Long Journey Into Tunneling
leo esaki; IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, New York 10598.©1974 The American Physical Society
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/RevModPhys.46.237
Phys. Rev. Lett. Phys. Rev. A Phys. Rev. B Phys. Rev. C Phys. Rev. D Phys. Rev. E Phys. Rev. ST AB Phys. Rev. ST AB Rev. Mod. Phys. Phys. Rev. (Series I) Phys. Rev. Volume: Page/Article:
Previous article
Next article Issue 2 contents View Page Images PDF (1606 kB), Figure Images , or Buy this Article
Long journey into tunneling
Leo Esaki
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, New York 10598
URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/RMP/v46/p237
DOI: 10.1103/RevModPhys.46.237
View Page Images PDF (1606 kB), Figure Images , or Buy this Article Previous article Next article Issue 2 contents ... [Show References] Requires Subscription
[Show Articles Citing This One]
Requires Subscription Previous article Next article Issue 2 contents
APS
... Search
E-mail: prola@aps.org

87. Phys. Rev. 109, 603 (1958): Esaki - New Phenomenon In Narrow...
leo esaki; Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo, Limited, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan. Received 11October 1957. ©1958 The American Physical Society
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRev.109.603
Phys. Rev. Lett. Phys. Rev. A Phys. Rev. B Phys. Rev. C Phys. Rev. D Phys. Rev. E Phys. Rev. ST AB Phys. Rev. ST AB Rev. Mod. Phys. Phys. Rev. (Series I) Phys. Rev. Volume: Page/Article:
Previous article
Next article Issue 2 contents View Page Images PDF (297 kB), or Buy this Article
New Phenomenon in Narrow Germanium p n Junctions
Leo Esaki
Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo, Limited, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan
Received 11 October 1957 URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PR/v109/p603
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRev.109.603
View Page Images PDF (297 kB), or Buy this Article Previous article Next article Issue 2 contents ... [Show References] Requires Subscription
[Show Articles Citing This One]
Requires Subscription Previous article Next article Issue 2 contents
APS
... Search
E-mail: prola@aps.org

88. Vector » Browse By Author
Translate this page esaki, leo. Chapter 1 The evolution of semiconductor superlattices and quantum leo esaki. Book title Physics and Applications of Semiconductor Quantum
http://vector.iop.org/index.cfm?action=browse.home&type=au&dir=E/Esaki

89. Norwegian Inventions, Discoveries And Awards
esaki, leo, Japan, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY,USA, (1925); and. GIAEVER, IVAR, USA, General Electric Company, Schenectady,
http://www.cyberclip.com/Katrine/NorwayInfo/NorgeInv.html
Norwegian Inventions, Discoveries and Awards
Norwegian Inventions, Discoveries and Awards
Discoveries Inventions Awards
Discoveries
* Greenland
Eiríkr raudi (Eirik the Red) emigrated from Jæren in Norway to Iceland in 981 or 982 in search of a new land. The reason for his departure was apparently some unexplained local murders. From Iceland, Eirik made lots of travels, and on one of them found Greenland, which was soon colonized. But it was his son, Leif, who was going to make the biggest discovery... (see below)
* America
The Icelandic born Leif Eirikson, son of Eirik the Red (see above), followed in his father's footsteps and discovered more new land: He found a land he called Helluland (Flatstone Land, probably Baffin Island), then he sailed to Markland (Forest Land, Labrador), and from there to Vinland . The account of his voyage is preserved in Gronlendinga saga. Eiriks saga rauda has a different version: according to this, Leif put out to sea from Norway, in order to sail home to Greenland; he was driven off course, and came to an unknown land where he found self-sown wheat and vine trees. A new expedition, led by Toifinnr Karlsefni, set out for this new land, and in connection with his expedition, the saga calls the land Vinland. Traditions, it will be seen, differ, but they agree that a new land far west in the Atlantic had been discovered. The year is about A.D. 1000.

90. EsEz
esaki, leo (1925 ) Japanese physicist. Born March 12, 1925 in Osaka, Japan, heshared the Nobel Prize in physics, 1973, for his discovery of tunneling in
http://www.philately.com/philately/bioesez.htm
ESAKI, Leo (1925- ) Japanese physicist. Born March 12, 1925 in Osaka, Japan, he shared the Nobel Prize in physics, 1973, for his discovery of tunneling in semiconductors. His research led to progress in communications and computer networks. - Sierra Leone SIE1995L29.9 ESCALA, Erasmo ( - ) Chilean military hero - Chile 560 ESCALANTE, Ventura ( - ) Dominican sportsman, baseball player - Nicaragua 1384 ESCALON, Pedro Jose (1847- ) Salvadorian president, general, agriculturist - Salvador 336-54; O263-72 ESCHENBACH, Wolfram von (1170-1222) German poet, composer, musician - Germany BRD B456 Liechtenstein 741 ESCHER, Alfred (1819-1882) Swiss president, lawyer, educator - Switzerland 217 ESCHER, Maurits Cornelis (1898-1972) Dutch graphic artist - Netherlands NLD1998G07.1 ESCHER von der LINTH, Hans Konrad (1767-1823) Swiss journalist, engineer, geologist, author - Switzerland B121 ESCOBAR, Patricio Alejandrino (1839-1912) Paraguayan general, president - Paraguay 40; 351-3; O99-104

91. AsianWeek
esaki, leo, Japan, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, b.1925; and GIAEVER, IVAR, USA, General Electric Co., Schenectady, NY, b.
http://www.asianweek.com/102397/cover_story.html

Front Page
In This Week's Issue Subscribe Special ... About AsianWeek
October 23 - 29, 1997
The Ultimate Physics Club
Photo courtesy Stanford News Service Shop Talk: Professor Steven Chu with graduate student Jamie Kerman (left) and post-doctoral student Vladan Vuletic (right) in a lab at Stanford's Varian Physics Building. Stanford Professor Steven Chu graduates to the rank of Nobel laureate BY BERT ELJERA When Professor Steven Chu got the early morning phone call last week informing him that he had won a share of the Nobel Prize in physics, his first reaction was one of overwhelming relief. After his breakthrough work in 1985 on cooling down atoms with laser lights, Chu became what is known as "PNL," or pre-Nobel laureate. He was, in effect, a Nobel Prize-winner-in-waiting. But that wait can seem like forever. Chu has friends who have waited 20 years to get the prize, and some have not received it at all. "You expect to graduate from college, but no one really has the right to expect the Nobel Prize," he said from his home in Palo Alto, Calif. "If you get it, keep calm." Now, he can move on, he said.

92. Past Recipients, Honorary Degrees, Awards, Office Of The Provost, Northwestern U
esaki, leo, Doctor of Science, 1998. Evers, John, Doctor of Laws, 1967. Eyring,Henry, Doctor of Science, 1953. F. Fairbank, John King, Doctor of Humane
http://www.northwestern.edu/provost/awards/honorary/honrecip.html
Search Northwestern Search Help Office of the Provost O FFICE OF THE P ROVOST Office of the Provost Awards and Honors Honorary Degrees Recipients About the Office
Staff
Reporting Units Accreditation ... Grants Honorary Degree Recipients 1951 Through 2005 A B C D ... Z A Abrams, Meyer Howard Doctor of Humane Letters Ackermann, William Carl Doctor of Science Adamkus, Valdas V. Doctor of Laws Alexander, Margaret Walker Doctor of Literature Allen, Robert E. Doctor of Laws Amundson, Neal R. Doctor of Science Anderson, Judith Doctor of Fine Arts Anderson, Marian Doctor of Fine Arts Anderson, Robert Bernard

93. Anne-katharina Jappsen
2003, 10th International Symposium on Nanostructures Physics and Technology.Edited by Alferov, Zhores I.; esaki, leo. Proceedings of the SPIE, 5023, 220
http://www.aip.de/People/akjappsen/publications.htm

home
re
search
personal ...
cv
journals
  • "The Stellar Mass Spectrum from Non-isothermal Gravoturbulent Fragmentation":
    "Protostellar Angular Momentum Evolution during Gravoturbulent Fragmentation":
    "High frequency impedance of driven superlattices":
    Jappsen, A.-K., Amann, A., Wacker, A., Schomburg, E., and Schoell, E.,
    2002, J. Appl. Phys. 92, 3137 "Control of the dipole domain propagation in a GaAs/AlAs superlattice with a high-frequency field":
    Schomburg, E., Hofbeck, K., Scheurer, R., Haeusler, M., Renk, K. F., Jappsen, A.-K., Amann, A., Wacker, A., Schoell, E., Pavel'ev, D. G., Koschurinov, Y.,
    2002, Phys. Rev. B 65, 155320
conference proceedings
  • Jappsen, A.-K.; Li, Y.; Mac Low, M.-M.; Klessen, R. S.,
    Jappsen, A.-K.; Li, Y.; Mac Low, M.-M.; Klessen, R. S. , Memorie della Societa Astronomica Italiana, 76, 199 "Protostellar Angular Momentum Evolution during Gravoturbulent Fragmentation": Jappsen, A.-K., Klessen, R. S., 2004, Baltic Astronomy, 13, 385 "Effects of a Piecewise Polytropic Equation of State on Turbulent Fragmentation": Jappsen, A.-K.; Li, Y.; Mac Low, M.-M.; Klessen, R. S.

94. Caramba! - Nobelova Cena - Fyzika (1969-1985)
esaki, leo I. esaki, leo II. esaki, leo IV. Giaever, Ivar I. Giaever, Ivar II.Josephson, Brian DI. 1974. Ryle, Martin I. Ryle, Martin II. Ryle, Martin IV.
http://www.caramba.cz/page.php?PgID=946

95. Dr.Tarek Said's Homepage-Nobel Prize Winners
1974 Ryle, Martin, Sir Hewish, Antony 1973 esaki, leo Giaever, Ivar Josephson,Brian D. 1972 Bardeen, John Cooper, leon, N. Schrieffer, J. Robert
http://www.geocities.com/tsaid3/nobel.html
Nobel Prize Winners Literature Peace Physics Medicine ... Nationalities
Nobel Prize in Literature
2001 Sir V.S. Naipaul
2000 Gao Xingjian
1997 Dario Fo
1996 WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA
1995 SEAMUS HEANEY
1994 KENZABURO OE
1993 TONI MORRISON
1992 DEREK WALCOTT
1991 NADINE GORDIMER 1990 OCTAVIO PAZ 1989 CAMILO JOSE CELA NAGUIB MAHFOUZ 1987 JOSEPH BRODSKY 1986 WOLE SOYINKA 1985 CLAUDE SIMON 1984 JAROSLAV SEIFERT 1983 SIR WILLIAM GOLDING 1982 GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ 1981 ELIAS CANETTI 1980 CZESLAW MILOSZ 1979 ODYSSEUS ELYTIS ( ODYSSEUS ALEPOUDHELIS ) 1978 ISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER 1977 VICENTE ALEIXANDRE 1976 SAUL BELLOW 1975 EUGENIO MONTALE 1973 PATRICK WHITE 1972 HEINRICH BALL 1971 PABLO NERUDA 1970 ALEKSANDR ISAEVICH SOLZHENITSYN 1969 SAMUEL BECKETT 1968 YASUNARI KAWABATA 1967 MIGUEL ANGEL ASTURIAS 1965 MICHAIL ALEKSANDROVICH SHOLOKHOV 1964 JEAN-PAUL SARTRE 1963 GIORGOS SEFERIS ( GIORGOS SEFERIADIS ) 1962 JOHN STEINBECK 1961 IVO ANDRIAC 1960 SAINT-JOHN PERSE ( ALEXIS LEGER ) 1959 SALVATORE QUASIMODO 1958 BORIS LEONIDOVICH PASTERNAK 1957 ALBERT CAMUS 1956 JUAN RAMON JIMENEZ 1955 HALLDER KILJAN LAXNESS 1954 ERNEST MILLER HEMINGWAY 1953 SIR WINSTON LEONARD SPENCER CHURCHILL 1951 PER FABIAN LAGERKVIST 1950 EARL BERTRAND ARTHUR WILLIAM RUSSELL 1949 WILLIAM FAULKNER 1948 THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT 1947 ANDRE PAUL GUILLAUME GIDE 1946 HERMANN HESSE 1945 GABRIELA MISTRAL ( LUCILA GODOY Y ALCA-YAGA ) 1944 JOHANNES VILHELM JENSEN 1943-1940 Main Fund and Special Fund of this prize section.

96. EETimes.com
s leo esaki created almost as much excitement as the announcement of the transistorby Bell Labs a decade earlier. This may have been because tunneling was
http://www.eet.com/special/special_issues/millennium/milestones/holonyak.html

Advanced Search
Newsletters Edit Calendar
Print Subscription
... Print Edition
Nick Holonyak: tunneling has uses, but not in mainstream
Tunnel diodes: the transistor killers
by George Rostky The report in 1958 of the invention of the tunnel diode by Sony Corp.'s Leo Esaki created almost as much excitement as the announcement of the transistor by Bell Labs a decade earlier. This may have been because tunneling was a fundamental idea from quantum physics, and here it was in a simple p-n junction. Here was a super-fast device with switching speeds that left most transistors in the dust. As the fame of the tunnel diode spread through the electronics world, the device often took on the name of its inventor. It was widely known as the Esaki Diode. And the development earned Esaki a Nobel Prize in 1973. Before the award of that Nobel, the world was shaken when it learned that Esaki was leaving Sony in Japan to join IBM in New York State, an almost unprecedented happening. Japanese companies, especially large and reputable ones like Sony, were known for lifetime employment. Once you earned employment at an outfit like Sony, you knew that you would stay there forever or, at least, till you retired or died. So it was almost unheard of for somebody to leave, especially a high-ranking individual like Leo Esaki. So remarkable was Esaki's departure that both Sony and IBM issued press releases indicating that Esaki's move had the blessings of both companies and he was leaving under the most honorable circumstances. (Esaki is now president of the University of Tsukuba in Japan.)

97. Rm02-06
esaki, leo. Shibaura Institute of Technology. OISHI, Michio. Kazusa DNA ResearchInstitute. OKIMURA, Kazuki. Japan Science and Technology Corporation
http://www.nsftokyo.org/rm02-06.html
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
TOKYO REGIONAL OFFICE July 26, 2002
The National Science Foundation's Tokyo Regional Office periodically reports on developments in Japan that are related to the Foundation's mission. It also provides occasional reports on developments in other East Asian countries. Tokyo Office Report Memoranda are intended to provide information for the use of NSF program officers and policy makers; they are not statements of NSF policy. Report Memorandum #02-06 Reform of the Japanese System for Competitive Research Funding - Interim Report The following report was prepared by Kazuko Shinohara of the National Science Foundation’s Tokyo Regional Office. Ms. Shinohara may be reached at kshinoha@nsf.gov In the first meeting the CSTP members compared the funding systems between the U.S. and Japan. The second meeting was devoted to a comparison of proposal review systems between the U.S. and Japan. The third meeting discussed the points of reform for competitive research funding. In their fourth meeting they drafted an interim report and in the fifth meeting the interim report was completed. In each meeting their discussion was based on a considerable volume of information collected based on their thorough investigation. The CSTP's interim report suggests the following five points of reform. [NB: These are not strict translations of the original Japanese text, but only key points extracted from that text.]

98. Rm02-05
Members, esaki, leo, President, Shibaura Inst. of Tech. OONAMI, Masateru,President, Japan Accreditation Association
http://www.nsftokyo.org/rm02-05.html
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
TOKYO REGIONAL OFFICE June 21, 2002
The National Science Foundation's Tokyo Regional Office periodically reports on developments in Japan that are related to the Foundation's mission. It also provides occasional reports on developments in other East Asian countries. Tokyo Office Report Memoranda are intended to provide information for the use of NSF program officers and policy makers; they are not statements of NSF policy. Report Memorandum #02-05 Toyama Plan – Center of Excellence Program for the 21st Century The following report was prepared by Kazuko Shinohara, Scientific Affairs Assistant in the National Science Foundation’s Tokyo Regional Office. The opinions expressed in this report are Ms. Shinohara’s and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. Ms. Shinohara may be reached at kshinoha@nsf.gov One year has passed since the “Toyama Plan” brought a shock to academic circles and other concerned people in Japan. Whereas it has recently been renamed as “COE [ Center of Excellence] Program for the 21st Century” to make the points of the Plan clear, it has remained controversial especially in academic circles.

99. ESAKI, LEO
Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research The Institute Translate this page esaki, leo. Tsukuba/Japan. Heine, Volker. Cambridge/Großbritannien. Parrinello,Michele. Manno/Schweiz. Scientific Members. TOP. horizontal line
http://www.websters-online-dictionary.org/definition/ESAKI, LEO
Philip M. Parker, INSEAD.
ESAKI, LEO
Specialty Definition: Esaki Leona
(From Wikipedia , the free Encyclopedia) Esaki Leona Leo Esaki ) is a Japanese physicist who won the Nobel prize in Physics in 1973. He is known for his invention of the Esaki diode. He was born in Osaka, Japan on March 12, 1925. He received his B.S. in 1947 and his Ph.D. in 1959, both in physics and from Tokyo University. His Nobel prize was awarded for research he had conducted around 1958 regarding electron tunneling in solids. He moved to the United States in 1960 and joined the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, where he became an IBM Fellow in 1967.
References

100. Max-Planck-Institut Für Festkörperforschung: Das Institut
Translate this page esaki, leo. Tsukuba/Japan. Heine, Volker. Cambridge/Großbritannien. Parrinello,Michele. Manno/Schweiz. Wissenschaftliche Mitglieder. TOP. horizontal line
http://www.fkf.mpg.de/de/organisation.html
Kontakt Ihr Weg zu uns E-Mail-Suche Links ...
Emeriti
Cardona, Manuel Queisser, Hans-Joachim Schnering v., Hans Georg Wyder, Peter
Bock, Hans Frankfurt am Main Eigler, Donald M. San Jose/California Esaki, Leo Tsukuba/Japan Heine, Volker Parrinello, Michele Manno/Schweiz
Wissenschaftliche Mitglieder Andersen, Ole Krogh Theorie Bilz, Heinz Theorie Brenig, Wilhelm Theorie Cardona, Manuel Physik Dransfeld, Klaus Physik Fulde, Peter Physik Genzel, Ludwig Physik Jansen, Martin Chemie Keimer, Bernhard Physik Kern, Klaus Physik Klitzing v., Klaus Physik Maier, Joachim Chemie Metzner, Walter Theorie Queisser, Hans-Joachim Physik Rabenau, Albrecht Chemie Schnering v., Hans Georg Chemie Simon, Arndt Chemie Wyder, Peter Physik
Fachbeirat

Mitglieder des Fachbeirats:

Prof. Dr. Flemming Besenbacher Institute of Physics and Astronomy,
University of Aarhus Prof. Dr. Anthony K. Cheetham, FRS Materials Research Laboratory,
University of California Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Eberhardt
Prof. Dr. Dieter Fenske
Prof. Dr. Klaus Funke (Vorsitzender) Prof. Dr. Michael W.H. Mehring 2. Physikalisches Institut, Prof. Dr. Yves Petroff

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 5     81-100 of 105    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter