AMS TIM At CERN July 25 To 29, 2005. 14001500, Report to the Collaboration, samuel CC ting Comments suggestionsto samuel CC ting. Please send your presentations to Laurence http://ams.cern.ch/AMS/Meetings/Meetings05/TIM_July05/Agenda6TIMJuly05.html
AMS Meetings Convenors samuel CC ting, Stephen Porter. AGENDA (vs.6) Splinter Meetings New for Thursday! Presentations; Visa applications please contact AMS http://ams.cern.ch/AMS/Meetings/Meetings2005.html
20th Century Year By Year 1976 ting, samuel CC, USA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge,MA, (European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), b. 1936 http://www.historycentral.com/20th/1976.html
AMS-02 AMS Correspondence samuel CC ting. Stephen V. Porter. 08/11/04. EA04-026. William HungerfordAppointed AMS Collaboration Representative to NASA AMS Project Office http://mmptdpublic.jsc.nasa.gov/ams02/html/correspondence.htm
Extractions: Date Number Topic To From EA-04-048 HQ Allowance for Program Adjustment (APA) Mark Sistilli Stephen V. Porter EA-05-046 Power Distribution System (PDS) Approach Samuel Ting Stephen V. Porter EA-05-042 AMS IRP Minutes of First Meeting NASA Headquarters Stephen V. Porter EA-05-041 Ting Availability to Address the Panel NASA Headquarters Stephen V. Porter EA-05-040 Integration and Testing of the AMS-02 Experiment with the Unique Support Structure (USS-02) Samuel Ting Stephen V. Porter EA-05-039 Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) Flight Safety Review Phase II Data Package Samuel Ting Trent D. Martin EA-05-038 Launch Vehicle Summary Requirements ASI/S. Pignataro Trent D. Martin EA-05-036 Letter of Endorsement for BUMPER Micrometeoroid Orbital Debris (MMOD) Risk Assessment Code Awards Committee, NASA Software of the Year Award Trent D. Martin EA-05-035 AMS Magnet Persistent Switch Costs NASA Headquarters Stephen V. Porter CGS-50433 Power Distribution System (PDS) Schedule Samuel Ting
January 27 - Today In Science History samuel CC ting. (source), Born 27 Jan 1936 samuel Chao Chung ting is an Americanphysicist who shared, with Burton Richter, the Nobel Prize for Physics in http://www.todayinsci.com/1/1_27.htm
Extractions: Australian research physiologist , who in 1963 received (with Alan Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley) the 1963 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the chemical means by which impulses are communicated or repressed by nerve cells. He also showed how signals pass between nerves and muscles. A nerve cell that is switched on by receiving a signal passes a chemical on to the next cell in line. This chemical expands minute openings in cell membranes, allowing ions to flood inside, reversing the electrical charge of the cell. This activity is repeated along the chain of cells, permitting transmission of the original impulse through the body. Eccles observed living cells in action by planting exceptionally tiny electrodes in them. Hyman G. Rickover
Putting Their Money Where Their Minds Are samuel CC ting, the MIT physicist, bet Mel Schwartz of Columbia Still suspicious,Schwartz offered to bet $10 that ting had found the particle. http://www.ishipress.com/sci-bets.htm
Extractions: August 25, 1998 By JAMES GLANZ fter escaping Germany within months of Hitler's rise to power in 1933 and wandering the world separately for 15 years, Maurice and Gerson Goldhaber were ready for the most ordinary of brotherly relationships when they reunited as particle physicists in the United States. So when Gerson was engaged in the experiment of his life, racing to discover a speck of antimatter called the antiproton, Maurice did what just about any scientist in a close family might do: He bet a colleague $500 that the antiproton did not exist. THE OUTCOME Experiments in 1957 proved Dr. Feynman wrong. He paid up. Far from showing disloyalty, Dr. Goldhaber was merely carrying on a noble tradition wagering on the outcome of scientific questions that seems as pervasive in labs, observatories and supercomputer centers as pools on college basketball tournaments are in office parks and machine shops. The tradition was already alive when titans like Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton were setting the foundations of modern science and making bets.
Extractions: 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 15 contents View Page Images PDF (623 kB), or Buy this Article J. G. Asbury , U. Becker, William K. Bertram , P. Joos, M. Rohde, and A. J. S. Smith
Extractions: 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 4 contents View Page Images PDF (678 kB), or Buy this Article Stanley J. Brodsky and Samuel C. C. Ting Received 6 January 1966 We have considered electron pair production by high-energy muons in a Coulomb potential as a test of quantum electrodynamics in the time-like region. If triple coincidence configurations are selected whereby the total momentum of the three final leptons is in the incident muon direction and the electron-positron pair is detected symmetrically with respect to the muon scattering plane, then the differential cross section is obtained in a simple analytical form. With these constraints it is seen that for a given effective mass of the pair, the contributions to the cross section involving timelike photon propagators become dominant as the muon scattering angle increases, although the cross section decreases slowly. If the constraints are relaxed, the cross section increases by orders of magnitude but the above features of the cross section persist. Thus, for a 10-BeV/ c incident muon, nuclear charge
Extractions: Jentschke's home In March 1963, I had just obtained my PhD from the University of Michigan and came to CERN where I had the good fortune to start working with Giuseppe Cocconi, Klaus Winter, Gustav Weber and Marcel Vivargent. After returning to the US, I worked with Leon Lederman at Columbia University and also wrote a paper in quantum electrodynamics with Stanley J Brodsky on higher-order Bethe-Heitler pairs. + e + carbon was measured in order to test the validity of QED at small distances. This experiment generated a great deal of interest and was at the centre of discussions in the community of high-energy physicists. My previous work with Stan Brodsky spurred my interest in this result and compelled me into redoing this experiment. Klaus Winter introduced me to Prof. Jentschke, director-general of the Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY) in Hamburg, and this proved to be a major event in my career as an experimental physicist. Jentschke showed an abiding interest in our work and often visited us on weekends or late at night to discuss our results. He also introduced me to many leading German physicists - Wolfgang Paul, Herwig Schopper, Max Born and others. He often invited my family and me to his home when we were not taking data. From discussions with him, I learned of the tremendous efforts he had made in founding DESY and his desire to make it a world-class laboratory. His wisdom and inspiration were of great help to me, such as when he advised me to accept an offer from MIT where I have worked ever since. At that time, I had received many attractive offers. MIT's was the only one that was not tenured, but Willi's advice turned out to be correct in the long run.
CERN Courier - Volume 43 Issue 5 - IOP Publishing Jentschke Tribute Writings Mulvey. Jentschke at CERN 1971-1975 John Mulvey.Jentschke Tribute - Writings ting. With gratitude to Willi samuel CC ting http://www.cerncourier.com/main/toc/43/5
Nobel Prizes In Physics samuel CC ting. American. particle physics. 1977. Philip W. Anderson. American.electromagnetism. 1977. Sir Nevill F. Mott. British. electromagnetism http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/PHYS/
Extractions: 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
AsianWeek ting, samuel CC, USA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge,Mass., (European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), b. 1936 http://www.asianweek.com/102397/cover_story.html
Extractions: October 23 - 29, 1997 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.
About Fermilab - History And Archives Project were Murray GellMann, California Institute of Technology; samuel CC ting, Nobel Laureate Dr. samuel ting termed the conference exceptional in an http://history.fnal.gov/lee_conference.html
Extractions: CONFERENCE STUDIES 'COSMIC CONNECTION' Benjamin W. Lee Over 500 scientists from around the world are expected to attend a conference at Fermilab Oct. 20-22, 1977. For the first time, physicists working in two frontier areas of scienceparticle physics and cosmology will unite to explore the relationship of the universe to inner space of the atom. The "Ben Lee Memorial International Conference on Parity Nonconservation, Weak Neutral Currents and Gauge Theories" will be held in the Auditorium. The meeting is dedicated to the late Dr. Benjamin W. Lee, Fermilab Theory Department head killed in an auto accident June 16. Dr. Lee was one of the original organizers of the conference. A memorial address is set for 5 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 20, opening day of the session. Dr. C.N. Yang, a 1957 Nobel Prize winner and a former colleague of Dr. Lee at the State University of New York-Stonybrook, will speak. R.R. Wilson, Fermilab director, will welcome researchers at 9 a.m. on opening day to launch the assembly. Among speakers on 33 topics to be presented are Fermilab experimenters A.K. Mann of the University of Pennsylvania and Leon Lederman from Columbia University.
Fun Ting Chan - ResearchIndex Document Query L. Taylor k C. Timmermans ad samuel CC ting n SM ting n SC Tonwar j J. Toth 11 B.Tellili 24 C.Timmermans30 ,samuel CCting 14 SMting 14 SCTonwar10 ,2 The http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/cis?q=Fun Ting Chan
Details samuel CC ting Autobiography http//nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1976/ting-autobio.html; samuel CC ting - Nobel Lecture http://findemaschine.pro-physik.de/search/show1.php3?domain=prophysik&nid=287800
Pro-Physik.de Findemaschine html, samuel CC ting Autobiography samuel CC ting 8211; Autobiography Iwas born on 27 January 1936 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the first of three http://findemaschine.pro-physik.de/search/index.php3?domain=prophysik&page=10&vk
Extractions: An interview with President of the University of Michigan, Ms. Mary Sue Coleman, by Yong Tang, People's Daily Washington Correspondent The University of Michigan (UM) is one of the most distinguished universities in the world. It has been enjoying a reputation for being the model American public university. The University of Michigan, together with two other public universities, the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has been called by some as " Three Magnates" of public universities in the United States The University of Michigan has a shining history: since its founding in 1917, it has produced seven Nobel laureates, including the famous Chinese American physicist Samuel C.C. Ting, one A. M. Turing award winner, five National Science Medal recipients, and numerous Pulitzer Prize winners. Among the current faculty of the University, 26 of them have been elected to the American National Academy of Sciences and 17 to the National Academy of Engineering. Former U.S. President Gerald Ford is also an alumnus of the University of Michigan.
SPIRES-EXPERIMENTS FIND+EE+CERN-LEP-L3 L3 EXPERIMENT. (Proposed , Approved 18 Nov. 1982, Began Aug. 1989, Completed2000). Spokesperson is samuel CC ting URL http//cern.ch/l3 http://usparc.ihep.su/spires/find/experiments/www2?ee=CERN-LEP-L3
CPL - Asian Science Bibliography ting, samuel CC (1936) American-born physicist. Specializes in proton synchrotron.Recipient of Nobel Prize for discovery of J/psi particle in 1976. http://www.chipublib.org/003cpl/asian_heritage/committee/sciencebib.html
Extractions: Asian Americans have made significant contributions to many fields of science. The following is a list of resources for finding biographical information about Asian American scientists. These are available at the Harold Washington Library Center and at many branches. Check for locations by using the library's online catalog located in each library or on the Chicago Public Library's home page. Please speak to a reference librarian if you need assistance.