Pro-Physik.de Findemaschine clifford G. shull 8211; Autobiography I was born on September 23, 1915 to myparents, David H. and Daisy B. shull, in the section of Pittsburgh, http://findemaschine.pro-physik.de/search/index.php3?domain=prophysik&page=5&vki
Nobel Prizes In Physics (USA, *1941); 1994 Bertram N. Brockhouse (Canada) clifford G. shull (USA)Studies on neutron beams; 1995 Martin L. Perl (USA, *1927) for the discovery http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_physik_e.html
Extractions: (Information not checked) (Germany, 1845-03-27 - 1923-02-10) Discovery of X rays Hendrik A. Lorentz (Netherlands, 1853-07-18 - 1929-02-04) Pieter Zeeman (Netherlands, 1865-05-25 - 1943-10-09) Henri A. Becquerel (France, 1852-12-15 - 1908-08-25) Marie Curie (France, Poland, 1867-11-07 - 1934-07-04) Pierre Curie (France, 1859-05-15 - 1906-04-19) Discovery of radioactivity Lord Rayleigh (United Kingdom) Philipp E. Lenard (Germany, 1862-06-07 - 1947-05-20) Joseph J. Thomson (United Kingdom, 1856-12-18 - 1940-04-30) Conduction of electricity in gases Albert A. Michelson (USA, 1852-12-19 - 1931-05-09) Measurement of the speed of light G. Lippmann (France) Karl Ferdinand Braun (Germany, 1850-06-06 - 1918-04-20) Guglielmo Marconi (Italy, 1874-04-25 - 1937-07-20) wireless telegraphy Johann D. van der Waals (Netherlands, 1837-11-23 - 1923-03-07) Molecular forces Wilhelm Wien (Germany, 1864-01-13 - 1928-08-30) Heat radiation (Sweden) H. Kamerlingh Onnes (Netherlands) Max von Laue (Germany, 1879-10-09 - 1960-04-24)
Pictures Of Famous Physicists clifford G. shull around 1950, 44kB Kai M. Siegbahn 50kB Karl Manne Siegbahn 29kBArnold Sommerfeld 41kB Sommerfeld at old age, 55kB Johannes Stark 27kB http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physlist.html
Caramba! - Nobelova Cena - Fyzika (1986-2002) Ramsey, Norman FI Dehmelt, Hans GI Dehmelt, Hans G. II. Bertram NI Brockhouse, Bertram N. II. shull, clifford GI shull, clifford G. II. http://www.caramba.cz/page.php?PgID=1018
Bearbeiten Von Clifford G. Shull - Seite Bearbeiten - Wikipedia shull, George Harrison Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Your shull, George Harrison body US botanist and geneticist. though its yieldwas low. The Indians in the south central area of shull, clifford G. http://de.wikipedia.org/?title=Clifford_G._Shull&action=edit
Shull, Clifford Glenwood shull, clifford Glenwood shull promoval na Carnegie Institute of Technology (bakaláremse stal v roce 1937) a titul Ph.D. dostal v roce 1941 na New York http://www.aldebaran.cz/famous/people/Shull_Glenwood.html
Extractions: Shull promoval na Carnegie Institute of Technology (bakaláøem se stal v roce 1937) a titul Ph.D. dostal v roce 1941 na New York University, kde také zaèal svou výzkumnou kariérou. Jeho práce, která byla ocenìna Nobelovou cenou, byla dokonèena v Oak Ridge National Laboratories v Tennessee a trvala celých devìt let. (1946-1955). Výzkumný tým vedl Ernest O. Wollan.
Office Of Science - DOE Nobel Prizes 1994, Physics, shull, clifford G. Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Basic Energy Sciences program, Oak Ridge National Laboratory http://www.er.doe.gov/Sub/Accomplishments/Heroes/heroes.htm
Extractions: DOE Nobel Laureates The most prestigious scientific awards in the world are the Nobel Prizes for Chemistry, Physics, and Physiology or Medicine. All three of these Nobel Prizes have been presented since 1901, with the Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Physics awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded by the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet. (The Nobel Prize web site is accessible at http://nobelprize.org Going back to the earliest days of the Manhattan Project, the Department of Energy and its predecessor agencies have blended cutting-edge research and innovative problem-solving to keep the United States in the forefront of scientific discovery for decades. As testimony to the high quality and impact of the research DOE underwrites, the Department of Energy has sponsored 40 Nobel Laureates since DOE's inception in 1977 - and a total of 80 Nobel Laureates since 1934 (associated with DOE and its predecessor agencies). (These Nobel Prize-winning scientists were recognized for work conducted while they were employed by DOE or predecessor agencies; for work conducted using DOE laboratory facilities; or because a national laboratory or a DOE program office provided long-standing and significant support for their other research efforts.) The complete roster of 80 DOE Nobel Prize winners, their biographies and photos is available at
Carnegie Mellon Libraries What S New Backfiles January-June 2004 clifford G. shull circa 1994 The university has received the papers of NobelLaureate clifford Glenwood shull (S 37) as a gift from the shull family, http://www.library.cmu.edu/NewsArchiveJanJun04.html
Extractions: Nominated by the members of the campus community, Jean Alexander and Charlotte Trexler are the most recent recipients of the University Libraries' "Excellence" awards. Jean Alexander , a library faculty member and head of Hunt Library Reference, was honored for "Excellence in Forwarding the Instructional and Research Mission of the University," for her work to meet the specialized and growing needs of the Department of Modern Languages. Charlotte Trexler , a library staff member in Hunt Library Circulation, was recognized for "Excellence in Increased Productivity," for her exceptional work to automate fines and billing notices for overdue items. Winners were announced at the annual Library Appreciation Picnic, which was held on June 4 in the Posner Center.
Oak Ridge Pays Tribute To Its Nobel Prize Winner He presented the scientist with a proclamation declaring April 10, 1995, as CliffordG. shull Day in Oak Ridge. shull s Nobel Prize also raised the hope http://www.ornl.gov/info/ornlreview/rev28-1/text/tri.htm
Extractions: Joy, pride, and hope. These were the emotions that Oak Ridge residents and ORNL employees felt October 13, 1994, when it was announced that Cliff Shull had received a Nobel Prize for physics. These emotions were rekindled on April 10 and 11, 1995, when Shull came home from Massachusetts to be honored for his achievements and to describe them in a replay of his Nobel Prize lecture. The professorial Shulldiminutive in stature but a giant among scientistshad been a resident of Oak Ridge from 1946 to 1955. He and his wife Martha lived on Kentucky Avenue, and his children played with the children of former ORNL Director Alvin Weinberg. He conducted his pioneering research using neutron scattering with Ernie Wollan at the Graphite Reactor of Oak Ridge National Laboratory . He is the first person to receive a Nobel Prize for research conducted in Oak Ridge. Shull shared the 1994 Nobel Prize in physics with Bertram Brockhouse of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. Shull and Wollan used neutron scattering to determine where atoms are in a crystal, and Brockhouse used this tool to learn how atoms move in a material. Neutron scattering has been used at ORNL reactors and research reactors throughout the world to probe the structure and dynamics of materials. The research has led to development of high-strength plastics and improved magnetic materials used for small motors, credit cards, computer disks, and compact discs. "This award was greeted with great joy in the neutron science community because of the respect we have for both men and in Oak Ridge because Cliff Shull did the work here that earned him the prize," said Ralph Moon, Shull's first doctoral student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where Shull spent his career after leaving ORNL in 1955. Moon was master of ceremonies for an April 10, 1995, program at the American Museum of Science and Energy in Oak Ridge, where Shull was honored. Sharing the stage was the original neutron diffractometer that Shull had used for his prize-winning research and that was brought to Oak Ridge from the
20th Century Year By Year1961 1918 for the development of neutron spectroscopy and by the other half toSHULL, clifford G., USA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, http://www.historycentral.com/20th/1961.html
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