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         Bloch Felix:     more books (23)
  1. Fundamentals of Statistical Mechanics: Manuscript and Notes of Felix Bloch by Felix Bloch, John Dirk Walecka, 2001-01
  2. Conductivity and Magnetism: The Legacy of Felix Bloch
  3. Technologietransfer Zum Internationalen Umweltschutz: Eine Volkerrechtliche Untersuchung Unter Besonderer Berucksichtigung Des Schutzes Der Ozonschich (Studien Zum Globalen Wirtschaftsrecht) by Felix Bloch, 2007-01
  4. Jews and Judaism in Switzerland: Jewish Swiss History, Swiss Jews, Synagogues in Switzerland, Albert Einstein, Wolfgang Pauli, Felix Bloch
  5. Swiss Nobel Laureates: Albert Einstein, Henry Dunant, Felix Bloch, Richard R. Ernst, Emil Theodor Kocher, Élie Ducommun
  6. Swiss Immigrants to the United States: Albert Einstein, Louis Agassiz, Felix Bloch, Othmar Ammann, Otto Frederick Hunziker, Albert Gallatin
  7. Eth Zurich Alumni: Albert Einstein, John Von Neumann, Georg Cantor, Wernher Von Braun, Niklaus Wirth, Wilhelm Röntgen, Felix Bloch
  8. Felix Bloch and twentieth-century physics. Dedicated to Felix Bloch on the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday.... Entire issue of: Rice University Studies, Vol. 66, No. 3, Summer 1980. by Felix] CHODOROW, M., R. HOFSTADTER, H.E. RORSCHACH, & A. L. SCHAWLOW, editors. [BLOCH, 1980-01-01
  9. Cern: Felix Bloch, Carlo Rubbia, Saint-Genis-Pouilly, Compact Muon Solenoid, Overview and Differences of 1964 Prl Symmetry Breaking Papers
  10. 11 offprints, 1932-1951. by Felix (1905-1983). BLOCH, 1951-01-01
  11. LA report 24: lecture series on nuclear physics by Felix Bloch, Robert F. Christy, et all 1944
  12. Ein Atheist liest die Bibel: Ernst Bloch u. d. Alte Testament (Beitrage zur biblischen Exegese und Theologie) (German Edition) by Felix Gradl, 1979
  13. Fundamentals of Statistical Mechanics by Felix Bloch, 1989-01-01
  14. Collected papers by Felix Bloch, 1972

41. Jewish Nobel Prize Winners
- felix bloch; 1954 - Max Born; 1958 - Igor Tamm; 1958- Il'ja Mikhailovich Frank;
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Judaism/nobels.html
Jewish Nobel Prize Winners
The Nobel Prizes are awarded by the Nobel Foundation of Sweden to men and women who have rendered the greatest service to humankind. Between 1901 and 1995, 663 Nobel Prizes were handed out. Of these, 140 are Jews or people of Jewish descent.
Literature
World Peace
Chemistry
  • 1905 - Adolph Von Baeyer
  • 1906 - Henri Moissan
  • 1910 - Otto Wallach
  • 1915 - Richard Willstaetter
  • 1918 - Fritz Haber
  • 1943 - George Charles de Hevesy
  • 1961 - Melvin Calvin
  • 1962 - Max Ferdinand Perutz
  • 1972 - William Howard Stein
  • Ilya Prigogine
  • 1979 - Herbert Charles Brown
  • 1980 - Paul Berg
  • Walter Gilbert
  • 1981 - Roald Hoffmann
  • 1982 - Aaron Klug
  • 1985 - Albert A. Hauptman

42. AldeaEducativa.com | Contenidos Y Consultas Educativas
Translate this page Especiales Entidades Nacionales Presidentes Parques Nacionales EfeméridesVenezolanos Ilustres. Premios nobel de 1952. bloch, felix.
http://www.aldeaeducativa.com/aldea/Nobel1e.asp?Which=1952

43. HTML REDIRECT
nobel Lecture Autobiography (in English) Biography (in German) Obituary from theBoston The prize was awarded jointly to bloch, felix, USA, b. 1905, (in Zurich
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel.html
Redirect Redirecting to http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel

44. Nobel Prize Turns 100: In Memory Of Stanford's Deceased Laureates
felix bloch, physics (1952); died 1983; with Edward Mills Purcell for theirdevelopment of new methods for nuclear magnetic precision measurements and
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/october3/nobel-deceased-103.html

Contact Stanford Report
News Service
Press Releases

Stanford Report, October 3, 2001 In memory of Stanford's deceased laureates
Felix Bloch, physics (1952); died 1983; with Edward Mills Purcell "for their development of new methods for nuclear magnetic precision measurements and discoveries in connection therewith." Bloch, a professor of physics, came to Stanford in 1934 and became emeritus in 1971.
Paul Flory, chemistry (1974); died 1985; "for his fundamental achievements, both theoretical and experimental, in the physical chemistry of the macromolecules." Flory, a professor of chemistry, came to Stanford in 1961 and became emeritus in 1975. Robert Hofstadter, physics (1961); died 1990; "for his pioneering studies of electron scattering in atomic nuclei and for his thereby achieved discoveries concerning the structure of the nucleons." Hofstadter, a professor of physics, came to Stanford in 1950 and became emeritus in 1985. Linus C. Pauling, chemistry (1954); peace (1962); died 1994; at the time of the awards at the California Institute of Technology; chemistry: "for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances"; peace: for his efforts to bring about an international ban on nuclear testing and to promote world peace. Pauling, a professor of chemistry, came to Stanford in 1969 and became emeritus in 1975.

45. Encyclopædia Britannica
bloch, felix felix bloch.Swissborn American physicist who shared (with EM Purcell)the nobel Prize for Physics in 1952 for developing the nuclear magnetic
http://search.britannica.com/search?query=Jose Felix Iguain

46. CERN Scientific Information Service
felix bloch. (1905 1983). and. Born in Switzerland, he emigrated to USA in 1935.He was awarded the nobel Prize in 1952 for his work on nuclear induction.
http://library.cern.ch/archives/bloch.html
CERN Home Archives Help CERN Scientific Information Group
Felix Bloch
and Born in Switzerland, he emigrated to USA in 1935. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1952 for his work on nuclear induction. He became CERN's first Director-General from October 1954 until August 1955 when he relinquished his duties as Director-General to Cornelis Jan Bakker in order to concentrate fully on his scientific work in the USA. Back to Directors-General
Maintained by: Library Web Team Last modified: Weds Dec 8 1999

47. Chronologie CERN/W.Pauli
General Conference of UNESCO in Florence, the American physicist and nobel prizewinner 1955-06-10,felix bloch has in front of him the cylindrical stainless
http://library.cern.ch/archives/chrono/chrono_2002_cern.php
CERN - Scientific Information Service - Archive Chronologie du CERN et de Wolfgang Pauli Chronology without details with details of CERN of Wolfgang Pauli of CERN and Wolfgang Pauli in English in French with photos without photos Or records
with the word :
Bottom of the page

44 record(s)
Flags of Member States (February 1998). To redress the balance and restore European science to its former prestige, at the European Cultural Conference at Lausanne, the French physicist and Nobel prize-winner Louis de Broglie proposes the creation of a European science laboratory. 16 February 1952. Left to right: Pierre-Auger, Edoardo Amaldi, Italian physicist who was appointed Secretary General of CERN at the first Council Session in Paris in May 1952, and Lew Kowarski, French physicist who became Director of the Laboratory Group which planned the site and its services. At the 5th General Conference of UNESCO in Florence, the American physicist and Nobel prize-winner Isidore Rabi puts forward a resolution, unanimously adopted, authorizing UNESCO, "to assist and encourage the formation and organization of regional centres and laboratories in order to increase and make more fruitful the international collaboration of scientists ...". October 1953. The site near Geneva selected for the planned laboratory.

48. Nobel Laureates Related To Switzerland In Science
nobel Prize in Physics 1920 Charles Edouard Guillaume - 1921 Albert Einstein -1952 felix bloch - 1976 Burton Richter - 1984 Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der
http://www.eda.admin.ch/tokyo_emb/e/home/scite/chinf/chnob.html
Embassy of Switzerland - Tokyo Search Contact Print English NOBEL LAUREATES RELATED TO SWITZERLAND IN SCIENCE
Nobel Prize in Physics
- 1920 Charles Edouard Guillaume

- 1921 Albert Einstein

- 1952 Felix Bloch

- 1976 Burton Richter
...
- 1992 Georges Charpak

Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- 1913 Alfred Werner

- 1937 Paul Karrer

- 1939 Leopold Ruzicka
- 1975 Vladimir Prelog ... - 1991 Richard R. Ernst Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine - 1909 Emil Theodor Kocher - 1948 Paul Hermann Müller - 1949 Walter Rudolf Hess - 1950 Tadeus Reichstein ... For Swiss Researchers in Japan

49. Jewish Laureates Of Nobel Prizes : Sciforums.com
Jewish Laureates of nobel Prize in Physics Year nobel Laureate Country of for hisstatistical interpretation of the wavefunction 1952 bloch, felix for their
http://www.sciforums.com/archive/47/2002/01/2/3820
sciforums.com - intelligent science community
Text-only version: Click HERE to see this thread with all of the graphics, features, and links.
Forum:
Thread: Jewish Laureates of Nobel Prizes

Radical Jewish Laureates of Nobel Prize in Physics
Year Nobel Laureate Country of birth
1997 Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude
"for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light" Algeria
1996 Lee, David M.
"for their discovery of superfluidity in helium-3" USA
1996 Osheroff, Douglas D. "for their discovery of superfluidity in helium-3" USA 1995 Perl, Martin L. "for the discovery of the tau lepton " Russia 1995 Reines, Frederick "for the detection of the neutrino" USA 1992 Charpak, Georges "for his invention and development of particle detectors, in particular the multiwire proportional chamber" Poland 1990 Friedman, Jerome I. "for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics" USA 1988 Lederman, Leon M.

50. Nobel Peace Prize?
JEWISH nobel WINNERS. 1922 Niels Bohr 1925 - James Franck 1925 - Gustav Hertz 1943- Gustav Stern 1944 - Isidor Issac Rabi 1952 - felix bloch 1954 - Max Born
http://www.toojewish.com/contrib/misc/sillynobel.html

51. Electron Magnetic Resonance
felix bloch and Edward Mills Purcell were awarded the nobel Prize for Physics in1952 for their development of new methods for nuclear magnetic precision
http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/emr/History/bloch.htm
The first successful nuclear magnetic resonance experiments in solid (parrafin wax) and liquid phases (water) were carried out independently at the end of 1945 respectively by Purcell, Torrey and Pound and by Bloch, Hansen and Packard. Felix Bloch is now remembered largely for his macroscopic phenomenological description of the magnetic properties of the atomic nucleus. This allowed him to develop a theory of nuclear induction which is particularly well suited to the study of transient effects, at the same time it is broadly consistent with a quantum theoretical treatment for systems in a steady state. Bloch's method was to derive expressions for the real and imaginary parts of the nuclear magnetic susceptibility. The Bloch Equations must still be studied by every serious student of NMR or EMR, they apply as well to the nucleus as to the electron. In recent years they have achieved even more prominence with the development of NMR based medical scanners (MRI)- see the selective slice simulation applet Felix Bloch and Edward Mills Purcell were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1952 "for their development of new methods for nuclear magnetic precision measurements and discoveries in connection therewith" Zavoisky was overlooked, and EMR missed out!

52. FUNDAMENTALS OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS
The 1952 nobel physics laureate felix bloch (1905–83) was one of thetitans of twentiethcentury physics. He laid the fundamentals
http://www.wspc.com/books/physics/4522.html
Home Browse by Subject Bestsellers New Titles ... Browse all Subjects Search Keyword Author Concept ISBN Series New Titles Editor's Choice Bestsellers Book Series ... Join Our Mailing List FUNDAMENTALS OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS
Manuscript and Notes of Felix Bloch

by John D Walecka
Preface

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction and Basic Concepts

Chapter 2: Classical Physics
Chapter 2.1: Hamilton's Equations(*)

Chapter 2.2: Phase Space(*)

Chapter 2.3 Liouville's Theorem(*)
The 1952 Nobel physics laureate Felix Bloch (1905–83) was one of the titans of twentieth-century physics. He laid the fundamentals for the theory of solids and has been called the "father of solid-state physics." His numerous, valuable contributions include the theory of magnetism, measurement of the magnetic moment of the neutron, nuclear magnetic resonance, and the infrared problem in quantum electrodynamics. Statistical mechanics is a crucial subject which explores the understanding of the physical behaviour of many-body systems that create the world around us. Bloch's first-year graduate course at Stanford University was the highlight for several generations of students. Upon his retirement, he worked on a book based on the course. Unfortunately, at the time of his death, the writing was incomplete. This book has been prepared by Professor John Dirk Walecka from Bloch's unfinished masterpiece. It also includes three sets of Bloch's handwritten lecture notes (dating from 1949, 1969 and 1976), and details of lecture notes taken in 1976 by Brian Serot, who gave an invaluable opinion of the course from a student's perspective. All of Bloch's problem sets, some dating back to 1933, have been included.

53. NOBEL Per La FISICA
Translate this page nobel per la FISICA Solvay 1927 1901. Röentgen, Wilhelm C. (Germania). 1902. Walton,Ernest TS (Irlanda). 1952. bloch, felix (USA). Purcell, Edward M. (USA). 1953.
http://digilander.libero.it/andreawentura/fisica/nobel.htm
NOBEL per la FISICA Solvay 1927 Röentgen, Wilhelm C. (Germania) Lorentz, Hendrik A. (Paesi Bassi) Zeeman, Pieter (Paesi Bassi) Curie, Pierre (Francia) Curie, Marie (Francia) Becquerel, Antoine H. (Francia) Rayleigh, John W. (Gran Bretagna) Lenard, Philipp (Germania) Thomson, Joseph John (Gran Bretagna) Michelson, Albert A. (USA) Lippmann, Gabriel (Francia) Marconi, Guglielmo (Italia) Braun, Karl F. (Germania) Waals, Johannes D. van der (Paesi Bassi) Wien, Wilhelm (Germania) Dalén, Nils Gustaf (Svezia) Kamerlingh Onnes, Heike (Paesi Bassi) Laue, Max von (Germania) Bragg, William H. (Gran Bretagna) Bragg, William L. (Gran Bretagna) Non assegnato Barkla, Charles G. (Gran Bretagna) Planck, Max Karl E.L. (Germania) Stark, Johannes (Germania) Guillaume, Charles E. (Francia) Einstein, Albert (USA) Bohr, Niels Henrik D. (Danimarca) Millikan, Robert A. (USA) Siegbahn, Karl M.G. (Svezia) Franck, James (Germania) Herz, Gustav (Germania)

54. The Nobel Prize
nobel Prize winners Literature 1910 Paul Heyse 1927 - Henri Bergson 1958 - Boris 1943- Gustav Stern 1944 - Isidor Issac Rabi 1952 - felix bloch 1954 - Max
http://www.rsballard.com/weblog/files/nobel.htm
From:
Sent: Tuesday, August 06, 2002 2:38 PM
Subject: Interesting Perspective Which segment of our world population do you think has made the most profound contribution to the betterment of mankind? There are 1.2 BILLION Muslims in the world, representing 19.6% of
the world's population. Nobel Prize Winners:
Literature
1957 - Albert Camus
1988 - Najib Mahfooz
Peace
1978 - Mohamed Anwar El-Sadat
1994 - Yasser Arafat
Chemistry 1990 - Elias James Corey 1999 - Ahmed Zewail Medicine 1960 - Peter Brian Medawar 1998 - Ferid Mourad There are 14.1 MILLION Jews in the world, representing 0.2% of the world's population. Nobel Prize winners: Literature 1910 - Paul Heyse 1927 - Henri Bergson 1958 - Boris Pasternak 1966 - Shmuel Yosef Agnon 1966 - Nelly Sachs 1976 - Saul Bellow 1978 - Isaac Bashevis Singer 1981 - Elias Canetti 1987 - Joseph Brodsky 1991 - Nadine Gordimer Peace 1911 - Alfred Fried 1911 - Tobias Michael Carel Asser 1968 - Rene Cassin 1973 - Henry Kissinger 1978 - Menachem Begin 1986 - Elie Wiesel 1994 - Shimon Peres 1994 - Yitzhak Rabin Chemistry 1905 - Adolph Von Baeyer 1906 - Henri Moissan 1910 - Otto Wallach 1915 - Richard Willstaetter 1918 - Fritz Haber 1943 - George Charles de Hevesy 1961 - Melvin Calvin 1962 - Max Ferdinand Perutz 1972 - William Howard Stein 1977 - Ilya Prigogine 1979 - Herbert Charles Brown 1980 - Paul Berg

55. Intellectual Output  From The Arab World
JEWISH nobel WINNERS 0.2% OF WORLDS POPULATION 14,000,000 million Jews. Stern 1944 Isidor Issac Rabi 1945 - Wolfgang Pauli 1952 - felix bloch 1954 - Max Born
http://masada2000.org/nobel.html
nobel prize, nobel prize winners, jewish nobel prize winners, islam, muslim, moslem
INTELLECTUAL OUTPUT
ARAB / ISLAMIC NOBEL WINNERS
of World's Population
1,400,000,000 Muslims
Literature
1988 - Najib Mahfooz 1988.
Peace
1978 - Anwar El-Sadat
1994 - Yasser Arafat ... A Joke!!!
Chemistry
1990 Elias James Corey 1999 - Ahmed Zewail Medicine 1960 Peter Brian Medawar 1998 Ferid Mourad Physics Abdus Salam The Norwegians played an ugly joke on the world by pretending Arafat was a Man of Peace. It is time to correct a vile error. Click HERE to add your name to the petition to revoke his award. Masada2000.org special Nobel Prize for I N T E G R I T Y! Norwegian, Kaare Kristiansen was a member of the Nobel Committee. He resigned in 1994 to protest the awarding of a Nobel "Peace Prize" to Yasser Arafat, whom he correctly labeled a "terrorist." JEWISH NOBEL WINNERS OF WORLDS POPULATION 14,000,000 million Jews

56. Introduction To MR Imaging & Spectroscopy
properties of nuclei was made possible by the work of felix bloch at Stanford Fortheir discovery of the NMR phenomenon they were awarded the nobel Prize for
http://www.med.umich.edu/msair/MRIntro1.html
document.write(firstIm) document.write(secondIm)
The NMR Phenomenon
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and in vivo spectroscopy (MRS) are founded on the same physical principles as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy which is widely used in chemistry and the structural characterization of small proteins in solution. The basic physical concept underlying NMR is one learned in introductory electromagnetism: a moving electrical charge produces a magnetic field and vice-versa. The atomic nucleus contains protons, charged particles which rotate like a spinning planet. Thus, protons should have a magnetic momement, albeit a very small one. The validity of this hypothesis was confirmed by Isidor Isaac Rabi of Columbia University, who received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1944 for making the first measurement of the magnetic moment of a nucleus. Isidor Isaac Rabi
Felix Bloch
Edward Mills Purcell
Rabi's measurements of nuclear magnetic moments were so difficult to make that they could not be applied to questions in chemistry and biology. The tremendous practical usefulness of the magnetic properties of nuclei was made possible by the work of Felix Bloch at Stanford University and Edward Purcell at Harvard University who demonstrated that nuclear "spins" could be made to resonate like a string on a guitar. For their discovery of the NMR phenomenon they were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics of 1952 . This short primer will hopefully help you understand the MR phenomenon described by Bloch and Purcell and how it can be used to identify chemical compounds or make images of spins in a sample.

57. Nobel Prizes In Physics
nobel Prizes in Physics. S. Walton (Ireland) 1952 felix bloch (USA, 190510-23- 1983-09-10) Edward M. Purcell (USA, *1912-08-30) Development of a novel
http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_physik_e.html
Nobel Prizes in Physics
(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)

58. FÍSICA - 100 Anos De Nobel - Prêmios De Física
Translate this page de núcleos atômicos. 1952 - felix bloch - Edward Purcell Pelo desenvolvimentodo método de ressonância nuclear. 1953 - Frits
http://www.fisica.ufc.br/donafifi/nobel100/nobel8.htm
LISTA DOS NOBELISTAS DE FÍSICA
NOTA: O prêmio deixou de ser concedido em alguns anos. 1901 - Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
Pela descoberta dos raios-X. 1902 - Hendrik Antoon Lorentz - Pieter Zeeman
Estudaram a modificação dos espectros por campos magnéticos. 1903 - Marie Sklodowska Curie - Pierre Curie - Antoine Henri Becquerel
Pela descoberta e estudo da radioatividade natural. 1904 - John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh
Por seus trabalhos com gases. 1905 - Phillip Edouard Lenard
Por seus trabalhos com os raios catódicos. 1906 - Sir Joseph John Thomson
Pela descoberta do elétron. 1907 - Albert Abraham Michelson
Por seus instrumentos de medir a velocidade da luz. 1908 - Gabriel Jonas Lippmann
Por um método de reproduzir cores por interferometria. 1909 - Guglielmo Marconi - Karl Ferdinand Braun
Pela telegrafia sem fio. 1910 - Johannes Diderik Van der Waals Estudou a equação de estado de gases e líquidos. 1911 - Wilhelm Frans Wien Pelo estudo das leis da radiação. 1912 - Gustaf Dalen Inventou um regulador de faróis e bóias. 1913 - Heine Kamerlingh Onnes Por seus trabalhos em baixas temperaturas e por ter liquefeito o hélio.

59. FÝZÝK NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ
FIZIK nobel ÖDÜLLERI. 1901. RÖNTGEN, WILHELM CONRAD. 1952. bloch, felix,. ABD,Stanford Üniversitesi, Stanford, CA, d. 1905 (Zürih, Isviçre), ö.1983; ve.
http://www.tubitak.gov.tr/nobel/fizik-nodul.html
FÝZÝK NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ RÖNTGEN, WILHELM CONRAD Almanya, Münih Üniversitesi, d.1845, ö.1923: “Sonradan adýyla anýlmaya baþlayacak olan önemli ýþýn tipini buluþuyla olanaklý kýldýðý üstün hizmetler için” LORENTZ, HENDRIK ANTOON Hollanda, Leyden Üniversitesi, d.1853, ö. 1928 ZEEMAN, PIETER Hollanda, Amsterdam Üniversitesi, d.1865, ö. 1943: “Manyetizmanýn radyasyon üzerine etkileri konusundaki çalýþmalarýyla verdikleri üstün hizmetler için” BECQUEREL, ANTOINE HENRI Fransa, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, d.1852, ö.1908: “Kendiliðinden radyoaktiflik olgusunu keþfiyle saðladýðý üstün hizmetler için” CURIE, PIERRE Fransa, Ecole municipale de physique et de chimie industrielles, Paris, d.1859, ö. 1906; ve eþi: CURIE i MARIE, nee SKLODOWSKA Fransa, d.1867 (Varþova, Polonya), ö.1934: “Profesör Henri Becquerel tarafýndan bulunan radyasyon olgusu üzerine yaptýklarý ortak çalýþmalarla saðladýklarý üstün hizmetler için” RAYLEIGH, Lord (J. W. STRUTT) Ýngiltere, Royal Institution, Londra, d.1842, ö.1919: “Önemli gazlarýn çoðunun yoðunluklarýný buluþu ve bu çalýþmalarý sýrasýnda argonu keþfediþi için” LENARD, PHILIPP EDUARD ANTON

60. ONR-Supported Nobel Laureates
All ONR Sponsored nobel Laureates. felix bloch - (Physics, 1952) Fordeveloping techniques of magnetic measurement in atomic nuclei.
http://www.onr.navy.mil/events/nobels/default.htm
ONR-Supported Nobel Laureates ONR is pleased to recognize the achievements of 3 more ONR-sponsored Nobel Laureates "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates."
  • Eric Cornell (JILA and NIST) Carl Wieman (JILA and University of Colorado) Wolfgang Ketterle (MIT)
View a video-interview with Wolfgang Ketterle
(you may need Windows Media Player to view) Transcript of video View a list of all 2001 Nobel Prize winners
All ONR- Sponsored Nobel Laureates Felix Bloch - (Physics, 1952)
For developing techniques of magnetic measurement in atomic nuclei.
General Applications: Magnetic resonance imagery
Naval Applications: Naval medicine; nondestructive inspection Linus Pauling - (Chemistry, 1954)
For research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances.
General Applications: Modern physical chemistry; modern biochemistry

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