Bertram N. Brockhouse bertram N. brockhouse AKA bertram N brockhouse. Born 15Jul-1918 BirthplaceLethbridge, Alberta nobel Prize for Physics 1994 (with Clifford G. Shull) http://www.nndb.com/people/044/000099744/
Nobel Prize For Physics nobel Prize for Physics. HONOR. nobel Prize for Physics. 1901. Wilhelm ConradRöntgen. 1902 bertram N. brockhouse, Clifford G. Shull. 1995 http://www.nndb.com/honors/201/000067997/
Extractions: This is a beta version of NNDB Search: All Names Living people Dead people Band Names Book Titles Movie Titles Full Text for Nobel Prize for Physics HONOR Nobel Prize for Physics. Hendrik Lorentz Pieter Zeeman Henri Becquerel Pierre Curie ... Lawrence Bragg (no award) Charles Glover Barkla Max Planck Johannes Stark Albert Einstein ... Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman (no award) Werner Heisenberg Paul Dirac (no award) James Chadwick Victor Francis Hess Carl David Anderson Clinton Davisson ... Ernest Lawrence (no award) (no award) (no award) Otto Stern Isidor Isaac Rabi Wolfgang Pauli Percy Williams Bridgman ... Anthony J. Leggett David J. Gross, H. David Politzer, Frank Wilczek
Science.ca Profile : Bertram Neville Brockhouse The origins of brockhouses nobel Prize could be traced back to 1951. bertram Neville brockhouse has 1 activity for you to try in the Activities section http://www.science.ca/scientists/scientistprofile.php?pID=4
Bertram Brockhouse brockhouse, bertram Neville Companion of the Order of Canada, nobel Laureate He collaborated with Donald Hurst, Myer Bloom, G. Goldschmidt, and N. Page http://www.cns-snc.ca/history/pioneers/b_brockhouse/bbrockhouse.html
Extractions: Hamilton's only Nobel Prize winner revolutionized physics but had to be convinced that his work was important. Byline: Meredith Macleod Dr. Bertram Brockhouse, a professor emeritus at McMaster University, winner of the most prestigious awards in science, member of the Order of Canada and the only Canadian Nobel laureate who was born, educated and completed his life's work in this country, died Monday [October 13, 2003] at St. Joseph's hospital. He was 85. His health had been declining for a number of years but his standing as a leader in Canadian science has never faltered. "He was a heroic figure in our community and in material science," said Dr. Bruce Gaulin, a McMaster professor of physics, who holds a research chair named in Brockhouse's honour. "He was an almost larger than life figure for this university and the Canadian physics community." Brockhouse, one of 17 Canadian winners of a Nobel, won his physics prize for work in neutron scattering a field he invented. In the early 1950s, while a researcher for Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. at Chalk River, Brockhouse developed a device that used a neutron beam produced by a nuclear reactor to probe solid materials at the atomic level. It was science's first glimpse into what holds solid materials together. It was like shining a flashlight into the mysteries of crystals, metals, minerals, gems and rocks.
Shull Wins Physics Nobel For Work Done 40 Years Ago In simple terms, Clifford G. Shull has helped answer the question of where atomsare, and bertram N. brockhouse the question of what atoms do, the nobel http://wild-turkey.mit.edu/V115/YIR/shull.00n.html
Extractions: Although 1994 will be the date recorded for Professor Emeritus of Physics Clifford G. Shull's Nobel Prize, the records probably won't record the campaign on his behalf that followed the real prize-winning effort, which took place more than 40 years ago when Shull worked at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Shull's most important work was done at the Oak Ridge facility in Tennessee from 1946-51. At Oak Ridge, Shull, 79, and his colleague, the late Ernest Wollan, "systematically investigated the fundamental principles of elastic neutron scattering, thus providing the groundwork for this type of research," said Robert J. Birgeneau, dean of the School of Science. Members of the physics community have been lobbying the Nobel committee for 10 years to award the prize to Shull. The effort succeeded last year because Birgeneau and Institute Professor Jerome I. Friedman, a 1990 winner in physics, were able to convince international leaders in physics to recognize Shull and Bertram N. Brockhouse of McMaster University as the "real pioneers," Birgeneau said. Shull, 79, and Brockhouse shared the $930,000 prize for developing a new way of looking at atoms.
Nobel Prize In Physics 1994 bertram N. brockhouse Button 1/2 of prize Button Canada Button born 1918 nobel eMuseum Prize in Physics 1994 bertram N. brockhouse web site http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel/nobel1994.html
Nobel Laureates In Physics 1901 - Present nobel Laureates in Physics, 1901 Present. 1994, bertram N. brockhouse,Clifford G. Shull. 1993, Russell A. Hulse, Joseph H. Taylor, Jr. http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel/
Extractions: David J. Gross, H. David Politzer, Frank Wilczek Alexei A. Abrikosov, Vitaly L. Ginzburg, Anthony J. Leggett Raymond Davis, Jr., Masatoshi Koshiba, Riccardo Giacconi Eric A. Cornell, Wolfgang Ketterle, Carl E. Wieman ... Otto Stern Prize money withheld and not awarded this year. Prize money withheld and not awarded this year. Prize money withheld and not awarded this year. Ernest Orlando Lawrence Enrico Fermi Clinton Joseph Davisson, Sir George Paget Thomson Victor Franz Hess, Carl David Anderson ... Sir James Chadwick Prize money withheld and not awarded this year. Erwin Schrodinger, Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac Werner Heisenberg Prize money withheld and not awarded this year. Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman Prince Louis-Victor Pierre Raymond de Broglie Sir Owen Willans Richardson Arthur Holly Compton, Charles Thomson Rees Wilson ... Charles Glover Barkla Prize money withheld and not awarded this year. Sir William Henry Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Bragg Max Theodor Felix von Laue Heike Kamerlingh Onnes Nils Gustaf Dalen ... Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen Other Links Quick Facts
Brockhouse, Bertram N. brockhouse, bertram N. (1918). It appears that I was born in hospital in given by the amazing event of the nobel Prize and its accompaniments, http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/B/Brockhouse/Bro
Extractions: My sister entered the school system in a normal way. But I had been a somewhat nominal attendee of the one-room elementary school a couple of miles from our farm and my preparation for the system was somewhat mixed. I must have learned to read and to do simple arithmetic at a very early age because I cannot remember ever learning these subjects. But in other ways I was much behind my potential classmates. But the fine Vancouver schools I attended (Central and then Lord Roberts elementary schools and King George High School - and the Sunday School of St. John's United Church) soon took care of this. So I had what I believe to be a good basic education, except for social and organizational defects probably arising from the facts that I found school work easy and that I was younger than most of my classmates. There were other people of course who had influence on me. These included my two aunts: Edith (Neville) Murphy in Chicago and Maude (Brockhouse) Smith in western Canada. My older cousin Wilbert B. Smith may have inspired an early interest in radio technology. Our family finances were somewhat precarious so I carried newspapers for most of my teens. But the Great Depression made things worse and in 1935 our family moved by train to Chicago in the hope of bettering the situation. I had completed High School by this time and took some evening courses at Central YMCA College (now Roosevelt University). I was interested in the technical aspects of radios and learned to repair and design and build them. This and my facility with mathematics was, I suppose, what pointed me eventually in the direction of physics. For part of our time in Chicago I worked as a lab assistant in a small electronic firm, Aubert Controls Corporation. But the company failed in the recession of 1937. In 1938 our family decided to return to Vancouver and we drove across the continent, all of us I think enjoying the experience.
Bertram Brockhouse - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia (Redirected from bertram N. brockhouse). bertram Neville brockhouse (July 15, He shared the 1994 nobel Prize in Physics with American Clifford Shull for http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertram_N._Brockhouse
Extractions: (Redirected from Bertram N. Brockhouse Bertram Neville Brockhouse July 15 October 13 ) was a Nobel prize-winning Canadian physicist Brockhouse was a graduate of the University of British Columbia BA ) and the University of Toronto MA Ph.D ). From 1950 to he carried out research at Atomic Energy of Canada 's Chalk River Nuclear Laboratory . In 1962, he became professor at McMaster University in Canada, where he remained until his retirement in He shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with American Clifford Shull for developing neutron scattering techniques for studying condensed matter. In he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada and was promoted to Companion in edit Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertram_Brockhouse Categories 1918 births 2003 deaths ... Members of the Order of Canada Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox In other languages Deutsch Svenska This page was last modified 02:41, 10 September 2005.
Bertram Brockhouse (Clifford G. Shull and bertram N. brockhouse developed neutronscattering nobel physics laureate bertram brockhouse dies at 85 (AP Worldstream) http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0909647.html
Nobel Prize For Physics 1994 Clifford G. Shull (US) and bertram N. brockhouse (Canada), Trio winsNobel Prize for bringing quantum physics in from the cold (Agence France http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0105785.html
Extractions: Wilhelm K. Roentgen (Germany), for discovery of Roentgen rays Hendrik A. Lorentz and Pieter Zeeman (Netherlands), for work on influence of magnetism upon radiation A. Henri Becquerel (France), for work on spontaneous radioactivity; and Pierre and Marie Curie (France), for study of radiation John Strutt (Lord Rayleigh) (U.K.), for discovery of argon in investigating gas density
Nobel Prizes (table) 1994, Yasir Arafat Shimon Peres Yitzhak Rabin, George A. Olah, Clifford G.Shull bertram N. brockhouse, Alfred G. Gilman Martin Rodbell, Kenzaburo Oe http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/sci/A0835783.html
Extractions: Reference Desk Encyclopedia Nobel Prizes Year Peace Chemistry Physics Physiology or Medicine Literature J. H. van't Hoff W. C. Roentgen E. A. von Behring R. F. A. Sully-Prudhomme Emil Fischer H. A. Lorentz Pieter Zeeman Sir Ronald Ross Theodor Mommsen Sir William R. Cremer S. A. Arrhenius A. H. Becquerel Pierre Curie Marie S. Curie N. R. Finsen Institute of International Law Sir William Ramsay J. W. S. Rayleigh Ivan P. Pavlov Baroness Bertha von Suttner Adolf von Baeyer Philipp Lenard Robert Koch Henryk Sienkiewicz Theodore Roosevelt Henri Moissan Sir Joseph Thomson E. T. Moneta Louis Renault Eduard Buchner A. A. Michelson C. I. A. Laveran Rudyard Kipling K. P. Arnoldson Fredrik Bajer Sir Ernest Rutherford Gabriel Lippman R. C. Eucken Auguste Beernaert P. H. B. Estournelles de Constant Wilhelm Ostwald Guglielmo Marconi K. F. Braun Emil T. Kocher International Peace Bureau Otto Wallach J. D. van der Waals
NYU Today News: Nobel Laureate, Alumnus Shull, Dies At 85 Shull shared the nobel Prize with Dr. bertram N. brockhouse, an emeritus professorof physics at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, http://www.nyu.edu/nyutoday/archives/14/10/shull.nyu
Extractions: April 19, 2001 Dr. Clifford G. Shull, the NYU alumnus who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1994 for his work with neutrons, died on Saturday, March 31 in Medford, Mass. He was 85. Shull was honored with the Nobel Prize for developing a technique to probe the molecular structure of materials by bouncing neutrons off them. The technique Dr. Shull developed, neutron scattering, is widely used by scientists examining things as different as superconductors and viruses. His work was of considerable significance to the development of the transistor and the computer chip. Shull shared the Nobel Prize with Dr. Bertram N. Brockhouse, an emeritus professor of physics at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, who had independently worked on the problem. Born in Pittsburgh in 1915, Shull was educated at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and New York University, from which he received his doctorate in physics in 1941. He recalled NYU fondly for his scientific work there - "We graduate students were encouraged at an early stage to join and help in one of the half-dozen or so ongoing research projects within the department" - and because he met his future wife there, Martha Nuel-Summer. After World War II, Dr. Shull joined what is now Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. There he worked with the late Dr. Ernest O. Wollan, exploring how neutron patterns could be used to supplement those obtained with x-rays or electrons. Physicists had earlier used X-rays to probe materials, but neutron scattering was the first technique able to detect the position of hydrogen atoms and to measure magnetic fields around atoms. Shull later said he regretted that Wollan's death, in 1984, precluded his sharing the Nobel with Brockhouse and himself, "since his contributions were certainly deserving of recognition."
Research Reactors bertram N. brockhouse and Clifford G. Shull were awarded the nobel Prize inPhysics 1994 for pioneering contributions to the development of neutron http://www-naweb.iaea.org/napc/physics/ACTIVITIES/Research_Technology.htm
Nobel.txt Statement by nobel Laureates on the occasion of the onehundredth bertram N.brockhouse (Physics, 1994) 16.Herbert C. Brown (Chemistry, 1979) http://chem.oswego.edu/kestas/nobel.html
Extractions: on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary of the Nobel Prize Zhores I. Alferov (Physics, 2000) Sidney Altman (Chemistry, 1989) Philip W. Anderson (Physics, 1977) Oscar Arias Sanchez (Peace, 1987) J. Georg Bednorz (Physics, 1987) Bishop Carlos F. X. Belo (Peace, 1996) Baruj Benacerraf (Physiology/Medicine, 1980) Hans A. Bethe (Physics, 1967) Gerd K. Binnig (Physics, 1986) James W. Black (Physiology/Medicine, 1988) Guenter Blobel (Physiology/Medicine, 1999) Nicolaas Bloembergen (Physics, 1981) Norman E. Borlaug (Peace, 1970) Paul D. Boyer (Chemistry, 1997) Bertram N. Brockhouse (Physics, 1994) Herbert C. Brown (Chemistry, 1979) Georges Charpak (Physics, 1992) Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (Physics, 1997) John W. Cornforth (Chemistry, 1975) Francis H.C. Crick (Physiology/ Medicine, 1962) James W. Cronin (Physics, 1980) Paul J. Crutzen (Chemistry, 1995) Robert F. Curl (Chemistry, 1996) His Holiness The Dalai Lama (Peace, 1989) Johann Deisenhofer (Chemistry, 1988) Peter C. Doherty (Physiology/Medicine, 1996) Manfred Eigen (Chemistry, 1967)
University Of Toronto -- Nobel Prize Centennial Lectures 2001 bertram N. brockhouse (Physics, 1994). brockhouse Born in Lethbridge, Alberta in1918, Bert brockhouse received the 1994 nobel Prize for Physics for his http://www.utoronto.ca/president/nobel01/bios.htm
Extractions: About the Participants John C. Polanyi Har Gobind Khorana Bertram K. Brockhouse Andrew V. Schally ... (back to main page) JOHN C. POLANYI (Chemistry, 1986) John Polanyi who was born in Berlin, Germany in 1929, migrated with his Hungarian parents to England in 1933. He did his university studies at Manchester University, earning his Ph.D. in 1952, the same year in which he came to Canada. He worked as a post-doctoral fellow at the National Research Council Laboratories in Ottawa from 1952-1954, and as a research associate at Princeton University from 1954-1956. In 1956 he joined the faculty of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto where he has remained every since. His research involved the development of a new field of research in chemistry-reaction dynamics-providing a much more detailed understanding of how chemical reactions take place. For this work, he shared the 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. His ongoing research has earned him many other awards and honours, including, the Royal Medal of the Royal Society, and some thirty honorary degrees from six countries. Dr. Polanyi has served on the Prime Minister of Canada's Advisory Board on Science and Technology, and the Premier's Council of Ontario. An advocate of international human rights, he was a founding member of the Committee on Scholarly Freedom of the Royal Society, and the Canadian Committee for Scientists and Scholars, and the founding Chairman of the Canadian Pugwash Group in 1960. Dr. Polanyi has written extensively on science policy, the control of armaments, and peacekeeping.
On The 100th Anniversary Of The Nobel Prize 100 nobel laureates warn that our security hangs on environmental and social reform bertram N. brockhouse Physic, 1994. Herbert C. Brown Chemistry, 1979 http://www.nativevillage.org/Inspiration-/On_the_100th_anniversary_of_the_.htm
Extractions: 100 Nobel laureates warn that our security hangs on environmental and social reform The most profound danger to world peace in the coming years will stem not from the irrational acts of states or individuals but from the legitimate demands of the world's dispossessed. Of these poor and disenfranchised, the majority live a marginal existence in equatorial climates. Global warming, not of their making but originating with the wealthy few, will affect their fragile ecologies most. Their situation will be desperate and manifestly unjust. It cannot be expected, therefore, that in all cases they will be content to await the beneficence of the rich. If then we permit the devastating power of modern weaponry to spread through this combustible human landscape, we invite a conflagration that can engulf both rich and poor. The only hope for the future lies in co-operative international action, legitimized by democracy.
Nobel Prizes In Physics bertram N. brockhouse. CanadianAmerican. spectroscopy. 1994. Clifford G. Shull.American NUMBER OF nobel PRIZES. astrophysics. 6. atmospheric physics http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/PHYS/
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