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         Kapitsa Pyotr Leonidovich:     more detail

41. Ernest Rutherford - Scientist Supreme
Whilst not strictly a book about Rutherford, it is a book of letters a young Russian physicist, pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, wrote home to his mother,
http://www.rutherford.org.nz/bklock.htm
Biography Milestones Books Birthplace ...
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P L Kapitsa - Letters to Mother: The Early Cambridge Period
David Lockwood (Ed) National Research Council of Canada 1989
ISBN 0-660-13099-8
120 pages. Soft Cover.
11 black/white photos. Purchasing Details.
Out of Print. Some copys are available from the author, david.lockwood@nrc.ca My Comments on This Book.
Whilst not strictly a book about Rutherford, it is a book of letters a young Russian physicist, Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa, wrote home to his mother, from the time he left Russia in 1921 as part of a delegation to purchase scientific equipment for the research institutes which were being established in Petrograd, until 1926, when he first returned to Russia on a visit. In July of 1921 the delegation visited Cambridge and it was agreed that Peter Kapitsa would work with Rutherford for a year to gain research experience. (He stayed until 1934 at which time Russia refused to grant him an exit visa after a trip home.) So these letters give a fascinating view of Rutherford as seen by a young Russian physicist. David Lockwood is a New Zealand born and educated physicist who has spent his working life with the National Research Council in Ottawa, Canada. David did his first three degrees at the University of Canterbury, Rutherford's old university, (and was awarded a DSc from there in 2000). So Canadian scientists told David of Kapitsa's only visit to Canada in 1969, and of their other encounters with him.

42. Pyotr_Leonidovich_Kapitsa
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa (Russian ) (1894 – April 8, kapitsa, pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, pyotr leonidovich
http://copernicus.subdomain.de/Pyotr_Leonidovich_Kapitsa
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'''Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa''' ( Russian April 8 ) was a Soviet /Russian physicist who discovered superfluidity with some contribution from John F. Allen and Don Misener in
He was born in the city of Kronstadt . He worked in Cambridge for over 10 years and then went on a professional visit to the Soviet Union and was not allowed to return to Cambridge.
Ernest Rutherford
, whom Kapitsa had worked with at Cambridge, sold the Soviets Kapitsa's laboratory equipment. The Soviets then made Kapitsa form the Institute for Physical Problems with his equipment.
Kapitsa won the Nobel Prize in Physics in for his work in low-temperature physics . He shared the prize with Arno Allan Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson (who won for unrelated work).
Kapitsa was eventually removed from his role as head of the institute he created, over his refusal to take part in the Soviet Hydrogen Bomb project. In a letter to Stalin , Kapitsa described the project's leader, Lavrenty Beria , as "like the conductor of an orchestra with the baton in hand but without a score".
External link

43. Pyotr Kapitsa Biography
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa (Russian ) (1894 – April 8, 1984) was a Russian physicist who discovered superfluidity with John F. Allen
http://www.biographybase.com/biography/Kapitsa_Pyotr.html
Biography Base Home Link To Us Search Biographies: Browse Biographies A B C D ... Z Pyotr Kapitsa Biography Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa
He was born in the city of Kronstadt. He worked in Cambridge for over 10 years and then went on a professional visit to the Soviet Union and was not allowed to return to Cambridge.
Ernest Rutherford, whom Kapitsa had worked with at Cambridge, sold the Soviets Kapitsa's laboratory equipment. The Soviets then made Kapitsa form the Institute for Physical Problems with his equipment.
Kapitsa won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1978 for his work in low-temperature physics. He shared the Prize with Arno Allan Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson. Pyotr Kapitsa Resources Contact Us Sitemap
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License . It uses material from the Wikipedia article Pyotr Kapitsa

44. IL FISICO DELLA SETTIMANA
Translate this page pyotr leonidovich kapitsa ( ). Kronstadt, Russia, 9.7.1894 – Mosca, 8.4.1984. pyotr leonidovich kapitsa
http://www.a-i-f.it/FISICI/fisico28.htm
IL FISICO DELLA SETTIMANA
F N Cavendih Laboratory Mond Laboratory N el 1934, mentre era in visita in Unione Sovietica per un congresso, gli fu ritirato il passaporto e fu trattenuto per ordine di Stalin. Nel 1935 fu nominato direttore del nuovo Laboratorio per i Problemi Fisici C D N planotron e nigotron N el 1978 gli fu assegnato il Premio Nobel S International Series of Monographs on Physics A Movimento Pugwash.
L etture consigliate:
  • P. L. Kapitsa. La scienza come impresa mondiale (a cura di Lucio Lombardo Radice), Editori Riuniti, Roma 1979
L ink: http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1978/kapitsa-bio.html
I n questa settimana nascono: B ibliografia:
  • S. Bergia, G. Dragoni, G. Gottardi. Dizionario biografico degli scienziati e dei tecnici, Bologna, Zanichelli, 1999 AA.VV. Scienziati e tecnologi dalle origini al 1875, voll. I, II, III - Enciclopedia della Scienza e Tecnica (EST), Milano, Mondadori, 1975 AA.VV. Scienziati e tecnologi contemporanei, voll. I, II, III - Enciclopedia della Scienza e Tecnica (EST), Milano, Mondadori, 1976 http://www.todayinsci.com/

45. Store Product Details
, old age; threequarter profile; suit; sitting;......Item ID, kapitsa Petr A2. Title, Petr leonidovich kapitsa (pyotr leonidovich Kapitza).
http://store.aip.org/OA_HTML/ecl.jsp?mode=detail&item=55130

46. Store Product Details
Item ID, kapitsa Petr E1. Title, Petr Leonidovish kapitsa (pyotr leonidovich Kapitza) Abram Ioffe, Victor Frenkel, Nikolai Semenov,
http://store.aip.org/OA_HTML/ecl.jsp?mode=detail&item=82028

47. Golem.de - Lexikon
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa
http://lexikon.golem.de/Pjotr_Kapiza
News Forum Archiv Markt ... Impressum Lexikon-Suche Lizenz Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Pjotr Leonidowitsch Kapiza 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 Windows Vista Enterprise nur im Jahresabo 20-Zoll-Breitbild-LCD von BenQ mit 8 ms Reaktionszeit ... Originalartikel
Lexikon: Pjotr Leonidowitsch Kapiza
Weitergeleitet von Pjotr Leonidowitsch Kapiza russisch ; * 26. Juni/ 8. Juli in Kronstadt 8. April in Moskau ) war ein russischer Physiker. Kapiza wurde zwar in Kronstadt geboren, lebte als Heranwachsender jedoch in St. Petersburg Abram Ioffe arbeitete er im Cavendish-Laboratorium in Cambridge Moskau im Jahr von Helium-4 im Jahr Kapiza erhielt den Physik Nobelpreis Tieftemperaturphysik
Anmerkung: julianischem Kalender angegeben, der in Russland bis zur Oktoberrevolution gregorianischen Kalender. ( Siehe auch: Wikipedia:Namenskonventionen/Kyrillisch
Personendaten
NAME Kapiza, Pjotr Leonidowitsch

48. Chaadayev, Pyotr --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - Your Gateway To All Bri
kapitsa, pyotr leonidovich Soviet physicist who was a corecipient of the Nobel Prize for Information on pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, Arno Allan Penzias,
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article?tocId=9360223

49. Stolypin, Pyotr --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - Your Gateway To All Brit
Information on pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, Arno Allan Penzias, and Robert Woodrow Wilson. Includes the press release issued by the Nobel committee outlining
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9379628
Home Browse Store Help Search Britannica Concise Again Stolypin, Pyotr (Arkadyevich)
 Concise Encyclopedia Article Page 1 of 1
Pyotr Stolypin
born April 14, 1862, Dresden, Saxony
died Sept. 18, 1911, Kiev, Ukraine, Russian Empire
Russian politician. Appointed governor of the provinces of Grodno (1902) and Saratov (1903), he improved the welfare of the peasants while also subduing their rebellions. He gained the favour of Tsar Nicholas II and was appointed minister of the interior and prime minister in 1906. He initiated agrarian reforms that gave the peasants greater freedom to choose representatives to the zemstvo councils and to acquire land, which he believed would create a loyal and conservative class of farmers. His repressive measures against rebels and terrorists earned him the enmity of liberals. He dissolved the Duma when it opposed his reforms, but he later won support from moderates. He was assassinated by a revolutionary in 1911.
var mm = [["Jan.","January"],["Feb.","February"],["Mar.","March"],["Apr.","April"],["May","May"],["June","June"],["July","July"],["Aug.","August"],["Sept.","September"],["Oct.","October"],["Nov.","November"],["Dec.","December"]]; To cite this page: MLA style: "Stolypin, Pyotr."

50. 8 July - Today In Science History
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, Russian physicist, was a corecipient of the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics for his basic strong magnetic field inventions and
http://www.todayinsci.com/7/7_08.htm
Visit our new gallery of Perpetual Motion Machines through the centuries
JULY 8 - BIRTHS Henri Cartan
(source)
Born 8 July 1904
Henri (-Paul) Cartan, mathematician contains more than 30 volumes and aims to present mathematics so as to illustrate the axiomatic structure of modern mathematics. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
(source)
Born 8 July 1926; died 24 Aug 2004.
Swiss-American psychiatrist who was a leading authority on the psychology of dying. She is best-known for twelve books, beginning with On Death and Dying
On Death and Dying
, by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. Audrey Richards Born 8 July 1899 (died 1984)
Audrey I(sabel) Richards, English social anthropologist, educator, researcher among several E. African peoples, esp. the Bemba. She did fieldwork in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia), Uganda, and the Transvaal. Among her subjects of study were social psychology, food culture, nutrition, agriculture, land use, and economic organization. She recorded, for example, how long it took to complete a typical task, such as building a fence or making a garden, average work days in different seasons, time to prepare food. Igor Yevgenyevich Tamm (EB) Born 8 July 1895 (died 12 Apr 1971)
Soviet physicist who shared the 1958 Nobel Prize for Physics with Pavel A. Cherenkov and Ilya M. Frank for his efforts in explaining Cherenkov radiation. Tamm was an outstanding theoretical physicist, after early researches in crystallo-optics, he evolved a method for interpreting the interaction of nuclear particles. Together with I. M. Frank, he developed the theoretical interpretation of the radiation of electrons moving through matter faster than the speed of light (the Cerenkov effect), and the theory of showers in cosmic rays. He has also contributed towards methods for the control of thermonuclear reactions.

51. January 10 - Today In Science History
(Soviet physicist pyotr leonidovich kapitsa also shared the Nobel award, for unrelated research.) Sune K. Bergström. (source), Born 10 Jan 1916
http://www.todayinsci.com/1/1_10.htm
Visit our new gallery of Perpetual Motion Machines through the centuries
JANUARY 10 - BIRTHS Robert Woodrow Wilson
(source)
Born 10 Jan 1936
American radio astronomer who shared, with his coworker Arno Penzias, the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics for their discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation using a microwave horn antenna at Bell Laboratories, Holmdel, New Jersey. Their discovery in 1964 is now widely interpreted as being the remnant radiation from the "big bang" model for the creation of the universe several billion years ago. Wilson is continuing his astrophysics work with Penzias, looking for interstellar molecules and determining the relative abundances of interstellar isotopes. (Soviet physicist Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa also shared the Nobel award, for unrelated research.)
(source)
Born 10 Jan 1916
Swedish biochemist who shared the 1982 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, (with Bengt Ingemar Samuelsson and John Robert Vane) for the isolation Norman Heatley
(source)
Born 10 Jan 1911; died 5 Jan 2004.
Norman George Heatley solved problems in the extraction of penicillin from its mould, and paved the way for mass production. By D-Day of WW II, the Allies had an adequate stock to treat the wounded in danger of serious bacterial infections. Although it was Fleming who accidentally discovered penicillin (1928), it was Heatley who made it

52. The Element Helium -- Helium Atom
In 1938, Russian physicist pyotr leonidovich kapitsa discovered that helium4 has almost no viscosity at temperatures near absolute zero, a phenomenon now
http://www.worldofmolecules.com/elements/helium.htm
H ome Page
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The Element Helium Helium is a colorless, odorless, tasteless chemical element , one of the noble gases of the periodic table of elements . Its boiling and melting points are the lowest among the elements; except in extreme conditions, it exists only as a gas . The second most abundant element in the universe , significant amounts are found on Earth only in natural gas . It is used in cryogenics , in deep-sea breathing systems, for inflating balloons , and as a protective gas for many purposes. Helium is not toxic and has no biological effect.
hydrogen
helium
He
Ne

Full table
General Name Symbol Number Helium, He, 2 Atomic weight Chemical series Noble gases Group ... Appearance colorless
Thermal
data Melting point (at 26 atm K C Boiling point ... Electronic data Electron configuration s Electrons per shell Valence st ionization potential kJ mol nd ionization potential kJ mol Steric data Covalent radius pm van der Waals radius pm ... Crystal structure hexagonal Isotopes iso abundance half-life ... Stable with 1 neutron He Stable with 2 neutrons He synthetic ms Li All conditions STP except where noted.

53. FossickerBooks/Kocmoc/Hanging On By Bulychev
among them was not sent abroad, a social outcast pyotr leonidovich kapitsa. Could we see Professor pyotr kapitsa? His highness the King of Sweden
http://www.fossickerbooks.com/chemlife.html
Contents
This article by Bulychev appeared in the January 2001 issue of Khimia i Zhizn' [Chemistry and Life], a (1970s level) Scientific American type magazine, which publishes SF in every issue. Bulychev has been a frequent contributor.
-JHC
Hanging On
By Kir Bulychev translated by John H. Costello The magazine "Chemistry and Life - 21-st Century," not only customarily publishes tributes of its authors and friends, but it finds those who desire to compose the tribute. When I was informed that I had survived enough years to warrant the full treatment quite naturally I was utterly preening with satisfaction, but then I realized that there was absolutely no way that I could trust anyone besides myself to sing my praises, in as much as no one could do it so sweetly and convincingly as I myself. The magazine's editorial board took a sigh and caved in to my terms. Then I sat down at the typewriter, sat and sat and went back to other things, again returned to the keyboard.... Catastrophe! It turns out that not only am I not a chemist, but I have forgotten everything I once knew about the subject. I write science fiction stories for the magazine, but, despite the frequent requests of the editors, I have never inserted anything scientific into them.

54. 20th Century Year By Year 1978
kapitsa, pyotr leonidovich, USSR, Academy of Sciences, Moscow, b. 1894, d. 1984 for his basic inventions and discoveries in the area of lowtemperature
http://www.historycentral.com/20th/1978.html
Major Event/ Sports Nobel Prizes Pulitzer Prizes ... Popular Book s / Popular Television Shows Popular Music/ Grammy Awards
Major Events of 1977
Sports
NBA: Washington Bullets vs. Seattle Supersonics Series: 4-3
Stanley Cup:Montreal Canadiens vs. Boston Bruins Series: 4-2
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US Open Golf: Andy North Score: 285 Course: Cherry Hills CC Location: Denver, CO
World Series: New York Yankees vs. LA Dodgers Series: 4-2
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55. Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa. This is NOT the Wikipedia The content is from pyotr leonidovich kapitsa (Russian ) (1894 - April 8,
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Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa
This is NOT the Wikipedia - The content is from the Wikipedia
Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa Russian April 8 ) was a Russian physicist who discovered superfluidity with John F. Allen and Don Misener in He was born in the city of Kronstadt . He worked in Cambridge for over 10 years and then went on a professional visit to the Soviet Union and was not allowed to return to Cambridge. Ernest Rutherford , whom Kapitsa had worked with at Cambridge, sold the Soviets Kapitsa's laboratory equipment. The Soviets then made Kapitsa form the Institute for Physical Problems with his equipment. Kapitsa won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1978 for his work in low-temperature physics. He shared the Prize with Arno Allan Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson
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56. Novosibirsk (Unit 8)
one to Professor pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, Institute of Physical Problems, USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow, for his basic inventions and discoveries in
http://nota.triwe.net/teachers/tolstikova/novosib08.htm
To display this page you need a browser with JavaScript support. Novosibirsk (Unit 1) Novosibirsk (Unit 2) Novosibirsk (Unit 3) Novosibirsk (Unit 4) ... Novosibirsk (Unit 7) Novosibirsk (Unit 8) Politology (Unit 1) Politology (Unit 2) Politology (Unit 3) Politology (Unit 4) ... Comparative analysis of anti-globalization in the USA, the UK, Russia Novosibirsk (Unit 8) Unit 8 Science: Past and Present Read the text using the dictionary if necessary Text 1 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS IN MODERN SOCIETY Natural science is the main characteristic feature distinguishing the present civilization from the other civilizations in the past. From its early beginning in the sixteenth century the developments of science have influenced the course of western civilization more and more until today it plays a most dominant role. It is not much of exaggeration to say that we live in a world that materially and intellectually has been created by science. The point is easy to illustrate on the material level. One merely needs to mention the telephone, the radio, the television, the automobile, and the airplane, or any of the countless devices invented by the application of science. There is hardly an article used in the homes, in the places of work, or in the places of enjoyment that has not been modified by technology based on science. The means of communication that bind the continents into a single community depend on scientific know-how, without modern sanitation it would be impossible to have large centres of population; without modern industry and agriculture, it would be impossible to feed, to clothe and to provide the "abundant life" to this large population.

57. Nobel Prizes In Physics
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa. Russian. cryogenics. 1978. Arno A. Penzias. GermanAmerican kapitsa, pyotr leonidovich. Ernest Rutherford. 1923. Cambridge
http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/PHYS/
Nobel Prizes in Physics
Department of Chemistry, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ONTARIO M3J 1P3, CANADA For suggestions, corrections, additional information, and comments please send e-mails to jandraos@yorku.ca http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/ NOBEL PRIZE PHYSICS YEAR NAME OF SCIENTISTS NATIONALITY TYPE OF PHYSICS Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen German radiation Henrik Antoon Lorentz Dutch magnetism, radiation Pieter Zeeman Dutch magnetism, radiation Pierre Curie French radiation Marie Curie French radiation Antoine Henri Becquerel French radiation Lord John William Strutt Rayleigh British gases Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard Hungarian-German cathode rays Sir Joseph John Thomson British gases Albert Abraham Michelson German-American spectroscopy Gabriel Lippmann French optics Guglielmo Marconi Italian telegraphy Carl Ferdinand Braun German telegraphy Johannes Diderik van der Waals Dutch gases Wilhelm Wien German radiation Nils Gustaf Dalen Swedish gases Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes Dutch cryogenics Max von Laue German crystallography Sir William Henry Bragg British crystallography Sir William Lawrence Bragg British crystallography no prize awarded Charles Glover Barkla British radiation Max Planck German quantum theory, radiation

58. Dangerous-industries Search For PY
pyotr leonidovich kapitsa Typos/falses pyotr leonidovich kapitsa pyotr lenoidovich kapitsa pyotr elonidovich kapitsa Oyotr leonidovich kapitsa
http://www.dangeruss-industries.com/list.PY.html

59. Peter Kapitsa: Celebrities — Dates, Biographies, Photos
Pjotr leonidovich kapitsa was born in Kronstadt, near Leningrad, on the 9th July 1894, pyotr kapitsa died on April 8, 1984. http//nobelprize.org
http://www.strelna.ru/en/comments/datesperson/587.htm

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Peter Kapitsa
Comments (discussions) [total 0:7] document.write(''); July 08
P eter Kapitsa
physicist
Kapitsa began his scientific career in A.F. Ioffe's section of the Electromechanics Department of the Petrograd Polytechnical Institute, completing his studies in 1918. Here, jointly with N.N. Semenov, he proposed a method for determining the magnetic moment of an atom interacting with an inhomogeneous magnetic field. This method was later used in the celebrated Stern-Gerlach experiments.
At the suggestion of A.F. Ioffe in 1921 Kapitsa came to the Cavendish Laboratory to work with Rutherford. In 1923 he made the first experiment in which a cloud chamber was placed in a strong magnetic field, and observed the bending of alfa-particle paths. In 1924 he developed methods for obtaining very strong magnetic fields and produced fields up to 320 kilogauss in a volume of 2 cm3. In 1928 he discovered the linear dependence of resistivity on magnetic field for various metals placed in very strong magnetic fields. In his last years in Cambridge Kapitsa turned to low temperature research. He began with a critical analysis of the methods that existed at the time for obtaining low temperatures and developed a new and original apparatus for the liquefaction of helium based on the adiabatic principle (1934).
Kapitsa was a Clerk Maxwell Student of Cambridge University (1923-1926), Assistant Director of Magnetic Research at Cavendish Laboratory (1924-1932), Messel Research Professor of the Royal Society (1930-1934), Director of the Royal Society Mond Laboratory (1930-1934). With R.H. Fowler he was the founder editor of the International Series of Monographs on Physics (Oxford, Clarendon Press).

60. Astronomy Resources From Grau-Hall Scientific
James Watson Cronin, Val Logsdon Fitch(1980); Sheldon Lee Glashow, Abdus Salam, Steven Weinberg(1979); pyotr leonidovich kapitsa, Arno Allan Penzias,
http://www.grauhall.com/astronomy.htm

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Meanwhile, you might take a moment to contemplate the impending demise of the Hubble telescope and the wasting of $200,000,000 worth of instruments which have already been constructed for it but for which NASA has no plans to deliver and instal on Hubble. One also wonders why it is that NASA can't use some tugbot (robot tugboat) to pull the thing into an orbiting junkyard near the space station rather than figuring out how to drop this 24,000 pounds of equipment onto Earth without hitting someone with the pieces. An overall plan to consolidate space junk into one orbiting area would make it easier to keep track of the trash and would keep it available for future construction projects.
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