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         Physicists:     more books (100)
  1. Driven to Innovate: A Century of Jewish Mathematicians and Physicists by Ioan James, 2009-05-28
  2. General Relativity: An Introduction for Physicists by M. P. Hobson, G. P. Efstathiou, et all 2006-03-27
  3. Quantitative Finance and Risk Management: A Physicist's Approach by Jan W. Dash, 2004-09-01
  4. Van der Waals Forces: A Handbook for Biologists, Chemists, Engineers, and Physicists by V. Adrian Parsegian, 2005-12-05
  5. The Medium, the Mystic, and the Physicist: Toward a General Theory of the Paranormal by Lawrence LeShan Ph.D., 2003-05-01
  6. Reality and the Physicist: Knowledge, Duration and the Quantum World by Bernard D'Espagnat, 1989-01-27
  7. Classical Groups for Physicists by Brian G. Wybourne, 1974-03
  8. Confessions of a Jewish Priest: From Secular Jewish War Refugee to Physicist and Episcopal Clergyman by Gabriel Weinreich, 2010-02
  9. The Predictors: How a Band of Maverick Physicists Used Chaos Theory to Trade Their Way to a Fortune on Wall Street by Thomas A. Bass, 2000-11-01
  10. Ernst Mach: Physicist and Philosopher (Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science)
  11. The Mathematics Companion: Mathematical Methods for Physicists and Engineers by Anthony Craig Fischer-Cripps, 2005-05-01
  12. Materials and Devices for Electrical Engineers and Physicists (Mcgraw Hill Series in Electrical and Computer Engineering) by Roy A. Colclaser, 1984-08-01
  13. Lectures on Advanced Mathematical Methods for Physicists by Sunil Mukhi, N. Mukunda, 2010-04-27
  14. Model Making for Physicists by Alan Davidson Bulman, 1968-06

101. Science Jokes:2. PHYSICS : 2.13 PHYSICISTS
UK (cannonical lightbulb collection) Q How many quantum physicists does it Q How many experimental physicists does it take to change a light bulb?
http://www.xs4all.nl/~jcdverha/scijokes/2_13.html
2. PHYSICS
Subsections
2.13 PHYSICISTS
Index Comments and Contributions previous:2.12 measure the height of a building with help of a barometer physics
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Bottom of page Index Send comment ... October 2 jotero#NoSpam.ix.netcom.com (Jose Otero) Astromers's pickupline: your telescope or mine? From: becker#NoSpam.hal4.usm.uni-muenchen.de (Sylvia R. Becker) ...my computer doesn't understand me anymore... might be a possibility, too. physics
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Bottom of page Index Send comment ... May 24 Copernicus' parents: Copernicus, young man, when are you going to come to terms with the fact that the world does not revolve around you?! physics
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Bottom of page Index Send comment ... June 4 An astronomer is on an expedition to Darkest Africa to observe a total eclipse of the sun, which will only be observable there, when he's captured by cannibals. The eclipse is due the next day around noon. To gain his freedom he plans to pose as a god and threaten to extinguish the sun if he's not released, but the timing has to be just right. So, in the few words of the cannibals' primative tongue that he knows, he asks his guard what time they plan to kill him.

102. MedPhysics.info Open Discussions On Medical Physics
MedPhysics.info is a new discussion forum that provides medical physicists the opportunity to have open and productive discussions on any topic in their field in an easily accessible format.
http://www.medphysics.info
MedPhysics.info
Open Discussions on Medical Physics
FAQ Search Memberlist Usergroups Register Profile Log in to check your private messages Log in
The time now is Sat Sep 17, 2005 12:29 pm
MedPhysics.info Forum Index
View unanswered posts Forum Topics Posts Last Post General Announcements
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Wed Aug 17, 2005 10:38 am
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Radiation Therapy Physics
Wed Aug 17, 2005 10:10 am SteveThompson Diagnostic Imaging Physics Thu Aug 18, 2005 4:38 pm ahrejsa Nuclear Medicine Physics No Posts Health Physics Thu Jul 07, 2005 2:58 pm mbeychok Employment / Training Thu Sep 01, 2005 8:18 am Jacqueline Treatment Planning Systems ADAC Pinnacle3® Thu Sep 15, 2005 9:20 am Machiker CMS XiO® / Focal® Mon Nov 29, 2004 10:45 am kspencer TomoTherapy Hi·Art® Sat Aug 20, 2005 2:41 am wclerke Varian Eclipse Fri Aug 26, 2005 10:00 am uflgatorz Information Management General Discussions No Posts IMPAC Multi-ACCESS Sun Aug 21, 2005 7:47 pm rcessac Varian VARiS Vision Wed Aug 17, 2005 10:44 am rkrice DICOM RT No Posts Brachytherapy HDR Wed Dec 08, 2004 3:57 am

103. USATODAY.com - Japanese Physicists' 'pentaquark' Hints At Answers To Makeup Of M
physicists have discovered a new class of subatomic particles, offering unexpected insights into the building blocks of matter.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/science/2003-06-30-matter-usat_x.htm
Classifieds: Cars Jobs Dating USA TODAY ... Weather Wash/Politics Washington home Washington briefs Election 2004 Government guide Health Health home Medical resources Health information Editorial/Opinion Ed/Op home Columnists Cartoons More News Top news briefs Nation briefs World briefs States ... Talk Today Marketplace Newspaper
Classifieds

Click here to get the Daily Briefing in your inbox
Posted 6/30/2003 8:44 PM Today's Top News Stories Bomb kills 11 in Baghdad as rebels strike at Abu Ghraib New Orleans businesses to begin cleanup Ophelia moving away from N.C.; aims for New England Bush says Gulf rebuilding requires spending cuts ... Add USATODAY.com RSS feeds E-Mail Newsletters Sign up to receive our free Daily Briefing e-newsletter
and get the top news of the day in your inbox. E-mail: Select one: HTML Text Breaking News E-Mail Alerts Get breaking news in your inbox as it happens Japanese physicists' 'pentaquark' hints at answers to makeup of matter By Dan Vergano, USA TODAY

104. Photonics And Nanostructures
This peer reviewed scientific journal is targeted at physicists, material scientists, chemists, engineers and computer scientists who are interested in photonic crystals/band gaps, nanostructures and its applications.
http://www.elsevier.com/locate/photonics
Home Site map Regional Sites Advanced Product Search ... Photonics and Nanostructures - Fundamentals and Applications Journal information Product description Editorial board Audience Abstracting/indexing For Authors Guide for authors Online Submission Subscription information Bibliographic and ordering information Conditions of sale Dispatch dates Journal related information Most downloaded articles Other journals in same subject area About Elsevier Select your view PHOTONICS AND NANOSTRUCTURES - FUNDAMENTALS AND APPLICATIONS
Fundamental and Applications
Editors
T. Baba, H. Benisty, D.J. Norris, C.M. Soukoulis

See editorial board for all editors information
Description
This journal establishes a dedicated channel for physicists, material scientists, chemists, engineers and computer scientists who are interested in photonic crystals and photonic band gaps. The Journal will help shed light on the latest developments in this growing field of science that will see the emergence of faster telecommunications and ultimately computers that use light instead of electrons to connect components. The Journal features mainly original research work in experiment, theory and applications.
The journal covers the following areas of research: physics, chemistry, engineering optoelectronics and computers science related to applications in photonic crystals and photonic band gaps. Papers suitable for publication in this journal cover topics such as

105. International Association Of Mathematical Physics
The International Association of Mathematical Physics (IAMP) was founded in 1976 in order to promote research in mathematical physics. The Association invites mathematicians and physicists (including students) interested in this goal to become members.
http://www.iamp.org/
International Association of Mathematical Physics
IAMP information
Executive committee:
Current Officers of the Association:
Other Executive Committee members:
  • Yosi Avron
  • Percy Deift
  • Jean-Pierre Eckmann
  • Klaus Fredenhagen
  • Giovanni Gallavotti
  • Philippe Martin
  • Vincent Rivasseau
  • Horng-Tzer Yau
Other sites of interest (These links are for information purposes only)

106. SFZ In Bad Saulgau
International Young physicists Tournament. . The Physics World Cup. 18th IYPT 2005 in Winterthur/Switzerland. 14 of July - 21 of July 2005
http://www.iypt.org/
IYPT International Young Physicists' Tournament The Physics World Cup
19th IYPT 2005 in Bratislava/Slovakia 5 of July - 12 of July 2006
general information not implemented official regulations
(July 2005) The Regulations of the International Young Physicists' Tournament - rtf file The Regulations of the International Young Physicists' Tournament - pdf file contact General Secretary - Dr. Andrzej Nadolny President - Prof. Gunnar Tibell new problems Problems of the 19th IYPT - rtf file Problems of the 19th IYPT - doc file Problems of the 19th IYPT - pdf file 19th IYPT IYPT in Bratislava/Slovakia 2006 previous tournaments 2005 - 18th IYPT (Winterthur/Switzerland)
2004 - 17th IYPT (Brisbane/Australia)

2003 - 16th IYPT (Uppsala/Sweden)

2002 - 15th IYPT (Odessa/Ukraine)

2001 - 14th IYPT (Espoo/Finland) - link not reachable
2000 - 13th IYPT (Budapest/Hungary)

1999 - 12th IYPT (Vienna/Austria)

1998 - 11th IYPT (Donaueschingen/Germany)

1997 - 10th IYPT (Cheb/ Czech Republic)
1996 - 9th IYPT (Kutaissi/Georgia) - link not reachable 1995 - 8th IYPT (Spala/Poland) - link not reachable Rudolf Lehn webdesigner Dr. Alexander Urban

107. Physicists On Stamps
Scanned images of stamps from around the world. Donated scans are welcome.
http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physstamps.html
Physics-Related Stamps This page exhibits stamps displaying physicists and a few mathematicians and engineers important for physics. The stamps are combined in 'albums' according to the people who kindly contributed to the collection.
Hint: Use the search function of your browser if you look for a particular name. Donations (scans) are appreciated! Ernst Abbe (1840-1905), GDR, 1956, 61 kB
Carl Auer von Welsbach (1858-1929), Austria, 1936, 59 kB
Carl Auer von Welsbach (1858-1929), Austria, 34 kB
Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (1784-1846), FRG, 1984, 100 kB
Niels Bohr (1885-1962), Denmark, 1963, 94 kB
Satyendra Nath Bose , India, 1994, 24 kB
Curie
, Senegal, 1938, 76 kB
Curie
, Somalia, 1938, 81 kB
Albert Einstein (1879-1955), Zaire, 1979, 58 kB
Albert Einstein (1879-1955), USA, 1979, 53 kB Albert Einstein (1879-1955), Germany, 2005, 42 kB Albert Einstein (1879-1955), Tadjikistan, 12 kB Albert Einstein (1879-1955), Argentina, 1971, 21 kB Leonhard Euler (1707-1783), GDR, 1957, 38 kB Enrico Fermi (1901-1954), USA, 2001, 64 kB Enrico Fermi (1901-1954), Italy, 2001, 59 kB

108. What Physicists Do Fall 2005
presents a series of lectures, demonstrations, and films. WHAT physicists DO. Physics is what physicists do late at night
http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/
The Sonoma State University
Department of Physics and Astronomy
presents a series of lectures, demonstrations, and films
WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
Physics is what physicists do late at night
SEVENTIETH SERIES
FALL 2005
Mondays at 4:00 p.m. Schulz 3001 Coffee at 3:30 p.m. SEP 12 EXTREME NEUTRINOS: USING A CUBE OF 50,000-YEAR-OLD SOUTH POLE ICE TO PEER INTO SPACE
Dr. Kurt Woschnagg
of the University of California at Berkeley will explain how and why physicists go to the end of the world to build the world's largest and strangest telescope ( IceCube , successor to AMANDA ) in hopes of seeing nearly undetectable cosmic neutrinos.
SEP 19 TITAN RESULTS FROM THE HUYGENS PROBE
Dr. Chris McKay
of NASA Ames Research Center will present results from the probe that landed on the largest moon of Saturn
SEP 26 NANO Y MANO: THE BASICS OF NANOSCALE SCIENCE
Dr. Ramamoorthy Ramesh
of the University of California at Berkeley will talk about the exciting field of nanoscale materials and phenomena.
OCT COOLING THE CITIES TO REDUCE ENERGY USE AND IMPROVE URBAN AIR QUALITY
Dr. Hashem Akbari

109. American Academy Of Health Physics
Provides standards of communication, ethics, work practices, and knowledge for health physicists, and provides recognition as a Certified Health Physicist (CHP).
http://hps1.org/aahp/
American Academy of Health Physics
Welcome to the American Academy of Health Physics (AAHP) home page.
The AAHP is an organization that advances the profession of Health Physics, encourages the highest standards of ethics and integrity in the practice of Health Physics, enhances communications among Certified Health Physicists and provides a means for Active CHPs to participate in the certification program. All Certified Health Physicists are eligible for membership in the AAHP. Additionally, persons who have successfully completed one part of the two part exam are eligible for associate membership for that period of time that they remain eligible to take the remaining part.
These pages include information regarding the AAHP, the American Board of Health Physics (ABHP), the certification and recertification processes, as well as examples of recent (1993 - 2002) Part II exams. AAHP Preamble and Bylaws (September 2003) AAHP Strategic Plan (January 1999) AAHP Membership: Listings of Plenary, Associate and Emeritus Members, effective

110. Quantum Diaries - Follow Physicists From Around The World As They Live The World
Follow physicists from around the world as they live the World Year of Physics. Peter Steinberg Tommaso Dorigo Sophie Trincaz The physicists
http://interactions.org/quantumdiaries/physicists/
FIND A BLOG Career Week Rosa Alba Stephon Alexander Ursula Bassler Nick Brook Karsten Buesser Alessandro Cardini Bryan Dahmes Frederic Deliot Tommaso Dorigo John Ellis Makoto Fujiwara Rob Gardner Claire Gray Debbie Harris Karsten Heeger Alex Koutsman Sandra Leone Maaike Limper Frank Linde Shohei Nishida Jose Ocariz Caolionn O'Connell Marcello Pavan Sarah Phillips Anuj Purwar Julio Rodriguez Martino Peter Steinberg Andrey Tamanov Sophie Trincaz-Duvoid David Waller Gordon Watts Jochen Weller Zhi-Zhong Xing The Physicists
Peter Steinberg

Brookhaven, USA,
Lang: English BLOG VIDEO Tommaso Dorigo
Fermilab, USA
Lang: English BLOG VIDEO Sophie Trincaz-Duvoid
IN2P3, France
Lang: French BLOG Frank Linde
NIKHEF,
Netherlands
Lang: Dutch, English BLOG VIDEO Jochen Weller Fermilab, USA Lang: English BLOG VIDEO Maaike Limper NIKHEF, Netherlands Lang: Dutch, English BLOG Debbie Harris Fermilab, USA Lang: English BLOG VIDEO Frederic Deliot CEA/DAPNIA France Lang: French BLOG Andrey Tamonov JINR Dubna, Russia

111. SPACE.com -- Physicists Solve 30-Year-Old Neutrino Case
Solving a 30year-old scientific mystery, physicists have found the most convincing evidence yet that neutrinos elusive subatomic particles that were
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/generalscience/neutrino_wg_010618.html
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Moon Helps Hunt for Mystery Particles

Telescope Proves Mettle in Hunt for Cosmic Neutrinos

Scientists Detect Elusive Subatomic Particle

Heavy Hydrogen Measure Supports Big Bang

Physicists Solve 30-Year-Old Neutrino Case
By Matt Crenson

AP National Writer
posted: 05:56 pm ET
18 June 2001
Solving a 30-year-old scientific mystery, physicists have found the most convincing evidence yet that neutrinos elusive subatomic particles that were thought to have no mass whatsoever have a tiny wisp of heft after all. The finding means scientists will have to adjust their theories of the universe. "We're quite pleased with this result,'' said Kevin Lesko, a physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who helped design and operate the experiment. "I think there are probably a lot of bets being paid off today." Ever since their existence was first hypothesized by Wolfgang Pauli 60 years ago, neutrinos have been thought of as massless. But on Monday, representatives of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory in Canada announced that neutrinos made by nuclear reactions in the sun's core change from one type to another during their 93-million-mile journey to Earth. And only particles with mass can change form. The neutrino's mass cannot be much, around a mere billionth of a proton's. But its mere existence has profound implications:

112. This Is Your Philosophy (April 2002) - Physics World - PhysicsWeb
Are physicists realists? results of a poll.
http://physicsweb.org/article/world/15/4/2

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April 2002
This is your philosophy
Critical Point: April 2002 When Physics World ran a special poll last year to find out how physicists think philosophically, more than 500 readers replied. Here are the results.
Made their minds up
Everybody - including scientists - makes seat-of-the-pants practical judgements about what's real and what's not. The common-sense assumptions underlying these judgements can be unrecognized, inconsistent and even untenable; they can be home-grown, inherited and absorbed from others. But when someone is engaged in an activity as complex as science, it is almost impossible to avoid making such practical judgements. No matter how implicit and readily revised these judgements may be, they are based on preconceptions of what the world consists of and what the world's most important distinctions and categories are - in other words of how it all hangs together. Professional philosophers analyse these preconceptions and up the ante on them. They formally rework the assumptions into consistent, fully articulated and intellectually supportable positions. They then give them names, such as realist, antirealist, critical realist, constructivist, hermeneutical realist, and so on. To qualify as a philosophical position, it has to be advanced in clear words, articulated in appropriate detail and depth, and be defensible against criticism when scrutinized in a philosophical peer review.

113. PRODUCTS WARNING LABELS FOR PHYSICISTS
This Product Warps Space and Time in Its Vicinity. This Product Attracts Every Other Piece of Matter in the Universe, Including the Products of Other
http://www.goshen.edu/~calvinfs/humor/physwarn.htm
This Product Warps Space and Time in Its Vicinity.
This Product Attracts Every Other Piece of Matter in the Universe, Including the Products of Other Manufacturers, with a Force Proportional to the Product of the Masses and Inversely Proportional to the Distance Between Them.
The Mass of This Product Contains the Energy Equivalent of 85 Million Tons of TNT per Net Ounce of Weight.
HANDLE WITH EXTREME CARE: This Product Contains Minute Electrically Charged Particles Moving at Velocities in Excess of Five Hundred Million Miles per Hour.
Because of the "Uncertainty Principle," It Is Impossible for the Consumer to Find Out at the Same Time Both Precisely Where This Product Is and How Fast It Is Moving.
There is an Extremely Small but Nonzero Chance That, Through a Process Known as "Tunneling," This Product May Spontaneously Disappear from Its Present Location and Reappear at Any Random Place in the Universe, Including Your Neighbor's Domicile. The Manufacturer Will Not Be Responsible for Any Damages or Inconvenience That May Result.
THIS IS A 100% MATTER PRODUCT: In the Unlikely Event That This Merchandise Should Contact Antimatter in Any Form, a Catastrophic Explosion Will Result.

114. Classical And Quantum Gravity
(IOP) A journal for physicists, mathematicians and cosmologists working in the fields of gravitation and the theory of spacetime. Free contents and abstracts, full text to subscribers.
http://www.iop.org/journals/cqg
@import url(http://ej.iop.org/style/nu/EJ.css); Quick guide Site map Athens login IOP login: Password:
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IOP Select
IOP Physics Reviews IOP journal news ... Latest issue (complete) No 18, 21 September 2005 (S869-S1390) Open issue No 19, 7 October 2005 (3817-4030) Current volume Number 19, 7 October 2005 Number 18, 21 September 2005 Number 17, 7 September 2005 Number 16, 21 August 2005 Number 15, 7 August 2005 Number 14, 21 July 2005 Number 13, 7 July 2005 Number 12, 21 June 2005 Number 11, 7 June 2005 Number 10, 21 May 2005 Number 9, 7 May 2005 Number 8, 21 April 2005 Number 7, 7 April 2005 Number 6, 21 March 2005 Number 5, 7 March 2005 Number 4, 21 February 2005 Number 3, 7 February 2005 Number 2, 21 January 2005 Number 1, 7 January 2005 Journal archive Vol 22, 2005 Vol 21, 2004 Vol 20, 2003 Vol 19, 2002 Vol 18, 2001 Vol 17, 2000 Vol 16, 1999 Vol 15, 1998 Vol 14, 1997

115. 2111 Physicists And Astronomers
physicists conduct theoretical and applied research to extend knowledge of natural phenomena and physicists perform some or all of the following duties
http://www23.hrdc-drhc.gc.ca/2001/e/groups/2111.shtml
Quick Search Find an occupational description by entering its four-digit NOC code.
Physicists and Astronomers Physicists conduct theoretical and applied research to extend knowledge of natural phenomena and to develop new processes and devices in fields such as electronics, communications, power generation and distribution, aerodynamics, optics and lasers, remote sensing, and medicine and health. They are employed by electronic, electrical and aerospace manufacturing companies, telecommunications companies, power utilities, university and government research laboratories, hospitals and by a wide range of other processing, manufacturing, and research and consulting firms. Astronomers conduct observational and theoretical research to extend knowledge of the universe. They are employed by government and universities.
Example Titles
acoustics physicist
aerodynamicist
astronomer
astrophysicist
biophysicist
cosmologist
experimental physicist
health physicist
medical physicist metrologist nuclear physicist optics physicist plasma physicist radio astronomer research scientist, aerospace

116. The UnMuseum - Immanuel Velikovsky
Looks at the theory put forth in his 1950s text Worlds in Collision, and geologists' and physicists' reactions to it.
http://www.unmuseum.org/velikov.htm
Venus in the Corner Pocket
The Controversial Theories of Immanuel Velikovsky
In 1950 a Russian-born psychiatrist named Immanuel Velikovsky authored a controversial book. Velikovsky was extremely knowledgeable in the texts of ancient peoples. Based on his interpretation of these texts, Velikovsky reached the conclusion that our solar system, with its nine planets, was not always the same as we see it today. The book, Worlds in Collision , asserted that around 3,500 years ago the planet Venus was somehow ejected from the planet Jupiter as a comet. Comet Venus then started wandering through the solar system. Its gravitational field pushed other planets out of their orbits or changed their rotation. Velikovsky attributed many of the disasters recorded in ancient times to this strange interaction the Earth had with Venus. Material that fell from Venus's comet tail into Earth's atmosphere caused the plagues visited upon Egypt as recorded in the Bible. "Plague is throughout the land. Blood is everywhere," cried the Egyptian Ipuwer. "Men shrink from tasting, human beings thirst after water..." According to Velikovsky's thinking, a fine rusty ferruginous dust from the comet's tail filtered down on the globe turning everything red. As Earth went deeper into the comet's tail the dust turned to small stones and a hail of gravel pelted the Earth: "...there was hail, and fire mingled in with hail, very grievous, such as there was none like it in all the land of Egypt since it became a nation," the Bible reads.

117. Extra-large 'atoms' Allow Penn Physicists To Solve The Riddle Of Why Things Melt
physicists at the University of Pennsylvania have experimentally discovered a fundamental principal about how solid materials melt.
http://physics.about.com/b/a/182991.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Physics Homework Help ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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Extra-large 'atoms' allow Penn physicists to solve the riddle of why things melt
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July 04, 2005
Extra-large 'atoms' allow Penn physicists to solve the riddle of why things melt
"Physicists at the University of Pennsylvania have experimentally discovered a fundamental principal about how solid materials melt. Their studies have shown explicitly that melting begins at defects within the crystalline structure of solid matter, beginning along the cracks, grain boundaries and dislocations that are present in the otherwise orderly array of atoms. Their findings, which will appear today in the journal Science, answer longstanding fundamental questions about melting and will likely influence research in physics, chemistry, materials science and engineering, as well as studies of biological importance."
Extra-large 'atoms' allow Penn physicists to solve the riddle of why things melt
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118. Sonoma State University Physics And Astronomy
Courses, labs, faculty and graduates as well as useful pages on jobs, graduate school, physics, astronomy, and the popular What physicists Do public lecture series.
http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/
Sonoma State University
Department of Physics and Astronomy
What can you do
degree in physics?
Welcome to Physics and Astronomy
Latest News
Dr. Hichwa profiled in
Press Democrat
Dr. Hichwa honored with Excellence in Teaching Award
Photo at Commencement ...
PAST NEWS ITEMS

Our Department Introduction
Fact Sheet for prospective students

Courses and Degrees

Courses with Web Pages
...
Information for Lecturers (private)
Class Schedules Final exam schedule F 05 Public Programs What Physicists Do Public Viewing Nights at the SSU Observatory Our Mailing List People Our Faculty and Staff Our Society of Physics Students chapter Our Graduates Some Favorite Links Physics Astronomy Jobs Scholarships ... Educational Resources in Physics, Astronomy, and Related Fields Friends and Neighbors Bay Area Physics and Astronomy Colloquia Physics In Our Neighborhood (PION) The Sonoma County Astronomical Society The Robert H. Ferguson Observatory ... Dr. Joe Tenn presents prize-winning astronomers. Bad Astronomy Dr. Philip Plait corrects errors and misconceptions. Physics and Astronomy Departments in the California State University system Sonoma State University Created by at last updated by JST

119. MIT Physicists Create New Form Of Matter
MIT scientists have created a new type of matter, a gas of atoms that shows hightemperature superfluidity. The work is closely related to the
http://physics.about.com/b/a/180046.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Physics Homework Help ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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MIT Physicists Create New Form of Matter
Physics Blog
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Your Guide to Physics
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June 23, 2005
MIT Physicists Create New Form of Matter
"MIT scientists have created a new type of matter, a gas of atoms that shows high-temperature superfluidity.
The work is closely related to the superconductivity of electrons in metals and may help solve questions about high-temperature superconductivity, which has widespread applications for magnets, sensors and energy-efficient transport of electricity, said Wolfgang Ketterle, a Nobel laureate who heads the MIT group:

Electronic News - MIT Physicists Create New Form of Matter
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120. IMPORTANT PHYSICISTS
Interrelationship between some selected physicists and between the physicists and their institutions. The period covered is roughly from the middle of the nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth century.
http://home.att.net/~halgreenhouse/index.htm
IMPORTANT PHYSICISTS The purpose of this web page is to show the interrelationship between some selected physical scientists and between the scientistists and their institutions. The period covered is roughly from the middle of the nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth century. The selection of the scientists is based on their contribution to the atomic or molecular or crystalline structure of matter. 177 scientists have been selected.
Some scientists have been omitted by error and many have been omitted intentionally. The periods during world war one and world war two have been mostly omitted.
The link "SCI-LIST" is an alphabetical listing of the scientists and the institutions they attended. The link also lists the abbreviations of the institutions.
The "SCI-LIST" link should be opened first as it will give you the selected scientists and their related institutions. The other links, except the links "INFLUENC" and "TEACHERS", are institutions. Within each of the institutional links is a chronological listing of the selected scientists at that institution. The list of scientists is not complete and there is not a link for every institution. Some institutional links have been omitted because too few of the selected scientists attended them. Of the 146 institutions, there are links to 30 of them.
The content of the institutional links is niether a biography nor a description of their accomplishments. It is only of the institutions they attended and when.

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