Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Esaki Leo

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Esaki Leo:     more detail
  1. Highlights in Condensed Matter Physics and Future Prospects (NATO Science Series B: Physics)
  2. 10th International Symposium on Nanostructures: Physics and Technology (Proceedings of Spie)
  3. United States and Japan - Think New York [In Japanese Language] by Reona Esaki, Leo Esaki, 1980
  4. Large Scale Integrated Technology: State of the Art and Prospects (NATO Science Series E: (closed))
  5. Universitaire Japonais: Tetsuya Théodore Fujita, Kitaro Nishida, Okakura Kakuzo, Yukichi Fukuzawa, Kiyoshi Ito, Keiiti Aki, Leo Esaki (French Edition)
  6. Physicien Japonais: Hideki Yukawa, Sumio Iijima, Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, Toshihide Maskawa, Makoto Kobayashi, Leo Esaki, Masatoshi Koshiba (French Edition)
  7. Träger Des Japan-Preises: Benoît Mandelbrot, Tim Berners-Lee, Leo Esaki, Gerhard Ertl, Peter Grünberg, Marvin Minsky, Willem Kolff, Bruce Ames (German Edition)
  8. Connecting to the 21st century: Educational reform in Japan and reflections on global culture : a transcript of the speech presented by Leo Esaki February 20, 2001 (Weatherhead Policy Forum report) by Reona Esaki, 2001
  9. Creative Parenting Trained People Japanese Language Book by Leo Esaki, 1997
  10. SILICON SUBSTRATES: Powerful Interband Diode Developed.: An article from: Electronic Materials Update

61. The Seonam Distinguished Lecture Notes
Dr. leo esaki won a nobel Prize for Physics in 1973 for his discovery of quantumtunnelling in Semiconductor, which was performed at Research Institute of SONY
http://www.snu.ac.kr/engsnu/about/seonam/6innovation_ev/93.htm

History
Statistics Campuses Foundation ... Academic Calendar The Seonam
Distinguished Lectures The 6th Seonam Distinguished Lecture
Speaker
Dr. Leo ESAKI(born at Osaka, Japan in 1925) Dr. Leo Esaki won a Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973 for his discovery of quantum tunnelling in Semiconductor, which was performed at Research Institute of SONY Corporation, Japan. It should be noticed that this discovery had in fact been achieved about one year before his Ph.D. defense. The semiconductor device utilizing this phenomena is called the Esaki diode. After receiving the Nobel Prize, he moved to IBM Watson Research Center, where he proposed the artificially structured new material called superlattice. This pioneering work of Dr. Esaki, which open the era of bandgap engineering and semiconductor quantum well, was declined by the Physical Review Letter, and was published in the IBM Technical Report. He received the International New Materials Prize of the American Physical Society in 1985 for the invention of superlattice. Career Born March 12, 1925 at Osaka, Japan

62. FÍSICA - 100 Anos De Nobel - Prêmios De Física
Translate this page 1973 - leo esaki - Ivar Giaever - Brian Josephson Os dois primeiros peladescoberta do tunelamento quântico. O terceiro pelo tunelamento
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.

63. IBM Taiwan - ¥xÆW¤½¥q¥DºÞ¤¶²Ð
. . . . leo esaki nobel Winner1973; Gerd K Binnig nobel Winner 1986; Heinrich Rohrer nobel Winner 1986;
http://www-901.ibm.com/tw/press/bio/nobel_prize.html
Taiwan ­Ó¤H±M°Ï IBM ¨ä¥L°ê®a ·s»D«Ç ·s»DÀÉ®× ... ¥xÆW¤½¥q¥DºÞ¤¶²Ð ¡E ¿Õ¨©º¸±o¥D¤¶²Ð IBM ²¤¶ Ápµ¸§Ú­Ì ¬Ûö³sµ²¡G ³Ì·s®ø®§ ¤½ö©u¥Z ¬¡°Ê§Ö°T
¥xÆW¤½¥q¥DºÞ¤¶²Ð
¿Õ¨©º¸±o¥D¤¶²Ð

64. CERN May 99 (by EBW)
AD Stochastic cooling electrodes. Professor leo esaki (nobel Laurate) visitingthe AD ring (May 20, 1999). Professor leo esaki visiting the AD ring.
http://asacusa.web.cern.ch/ASACUSA/member/ad/may99-ebw/may99-ebw.html
CERN may 99 (by EBW)
AD Stochastic cooling electrodes Professor Leo Esaki (Nobel Laurate) visiting the AD ring (May 20, 1999) Professor Leo Esaki visiting the AD ring Professor Leo Esaki in the AD ring Professor Leo Esaki in front of the ASACUSA laser hut Professor Leo Esaki in the ASACUSA laser hut Tokyo University President, Professor S. Hasumi visiting the ASACUSA laser hut (May 25) Tokyo University President, Professor S. Hasumi visiting the ASACUSA laser hut (May 25)

65. Conferenceindex
Harold W. Kroto, 1996 nobel Laureate in chemistry Dialogue by Prof. Kroto and Dr.leo esaki, SAT Chairman ?Tsukuba Congress Center ?Organized by Science
http://www.apgrid.org/sat/english/event/body.html
SAT Events Schedule in 2001
July 13 (Fri)
General Assembly and SAT Forum 2001

Keynote Speech by Dr. Hiroyuki Yoshikawa, President of International Council for Science
ŸTsukuba Congress Center
ŸOrganized by:
Science Academy of Tsukuba
July 26 (Thu)
SAT Nobel Prize Talk

Keynote Speech by Prof. Harold W. Kroto, 1996 Nobel Laureate in chemistry
Dialogue by Prof. Kroto and Dr. Leo Esaki, SAT Chairman ŸTsukuba Congress Center ŸOrganized by: Science Academy of Tsukuba ŸCo-organized by: Organizing Committee of the Symposium in Commemoration of Prof. Eiji Osawa's Retirement TARA Center, University of Tsukuba ŸSupported by: Ibaraki Prefectural Government Oct 3 (Tue) - 5 (Fri) Tsukuba Symposium on Carbon Nanotube in Commemoration of the 10th Anniversary of its Discovery (CNT-10) ŸTsukuba Congress Center ŸOrganized by: Science Academy of Tsukuba Japan Science and Technology Corporation NEC Corporation http://www5c.biglobe.ne.jp/~CNT10/ Oct 12(Fri) SAT Luncheon Seminar Theme: in preparation ŸTsukuba Congress Center ŸOrganized by: Science Academy of Tsukuba Nov 1 (Thu) SAT Nobel Prize Talk PART 2 Keynote Speech by Prof. Ivar Giaever, 1973 Nobel Laureate in physics

66. Prêmio Nobel De Física
Lista dos ganhadores do Prêmio nobel de Física. Bohr, Ben Roy Mottelson, leo JamesRainwater 1974 Sir Martin Ryle, Antony Hewish 1973 leo esaki, Ivar Giaever
http://www.ahistoriadafisica.hpg.ig.com.br/nobel.htm
Lista dos ganhadores do Prêmio Nobel de Física 2002 Raymond Davis Jr., Masatoshi Koshiba, Riccardo Giacconi
2001  Eric A. Cornell, Carl E. Wieman, Wolfgang Ketterle
2000 Zhores I Alferov, Herbert Kroemer, Jack S. Kilby
1999 Gerardus 't Hooft, Martinus J.G. Veltman
1998  Robert B. Laughlin, Horst L. Störmer, Daniel C. Tsui
1997 Steven Chu, Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, William D. Phillips
1996  David M. Lee, Douglas D. Osheroff, Robert C. Richardson
1995  Martin L. Perl, Frederick Reines
1994 Bertram N. Brockhouse, Clifford G. Shull
1993  Russell A. Hulse, Joseph H. Taylor Jr.
1992 Georges Charpak 1991  Pierre-Gilles de Gennes 1990 Jerome I. Friedman, Henry W. Kendall, Richard E. Taylor 1989  Norman F. Ramsey, Hans G. Dehmelt, Wolfgang Paul 1988  Leon M. Lederman, Melvin Schwartz, Jack Steinberger 1987  J. Georg Bednorz, K. Alexander Müller 1986 Ernst Ruska, Gerd Binnig, Heinrich Rohrer 1985  Klaus von Klitzing 1984  Carlo Rubbia, Simon van der Meer 1983 Subramanyan Chandrasekhar, William Alfred Fowler 1982 Kenneth G. Wilson

67. PHY 308 Introduction To Quantum Mechanics
Brian Josepshon and his nobel lecture on Josephson tunneling leo esaki and his nobellecture on tunneling in semiconductors Ivar Giaever and his nobel lecture
http://quantum.physics.sunysb.edu/phy308/web_links.html
PHY 308: Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
Home
Instructor Syllabus Course Outline ... Courses
Here are some links that you might like to check out:  Max Planck and his Nobel lecture
Niels Bohr
and his Nobel lecture
Important experiments in quantum physics (http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/grexp.html#c1)
electron double-slit experiment  (http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/schroedinger/two-slit3.html) Brian Josepshon and his Nobel lecture on Josephson tunneling
Leo Esaki
and his Nobel lecture on tunneling in semiconductors
Ivar Giaever
and his Nobel lecture on tunneling in superconductors
Home
Instructor Syllabus Course Outline ... Courses

68. Phys Nobel List
Translate this page Selective List of nobel Prize Winners in Physics and Chemistry. Robert C. Richardson1986 Ernst Ruska, Gerd Binnig, Heinrich Rohrer 1973 leo esaki, Ivar Giaever
http://bengal.missouri.edu/~kosztini/courses/phys215-03/Phys_Nobel_List.html
Selective List of Nobel Prize Winners in Physics and Chemistry
Physics Eric A. Cornell, Wolfgang Ketterle, Carl E. Wieman
Zhores I. Alferov, Herbert Kroemer, Jack S. Kilby

Steven Chu, Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, William D. Phillips
...
Ernest Rutherford

69. AsianWeek
of Asian Americans who have shared the honor of being named nobel laureates. Physics1973 The prize was divided equally between esaki, leo, Japan, IBM Thomas J
http://www.asianweek.com/102397/cover_story.html

Front Page
In This Week's Issue Subscribe Special ... About AsianWeek
October 23 - 29, 1997
The Ultimate Physics Club
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.

70. P261-2002
the old 10 Deutschmark banknote Try some 1D quantum scattering Brian Josepshon andhis nobel lecture on Josephson tunneling leo esaki and his nobel lecture on
http://www.physics.uconn.edu/~dunne/p261-2002.html
PHYSICS 261Q Introductory Quantum Mechanics
University of Connecticut
Professor Gerald Dunne
Fall 2002
"Anyone who is not shocked by quantum mechanics has not fully understood it." (Niels Bohr) Syllabus
Here are some links that you might like to check out.
Max Planck
and his Nobel lecture
Blackbody spectrum from COBE
, the COsmic Background Explorer; for more information on the data see George Smoot's webpage
Important experiments in quantum physics
Albert Einstein
and his Nobel lecture
Niels Bohr
and his Nobel lecture double-slit experiment : part of the project at the University of Colorado A macroscopic attempt at the double-slit experiment Find the normalized Gaussian wavefunction on the old 10 Deutschmark banknote Try some 1D quantum scattering Brian Josepshon and his Nobel lecture on Josephson tunneling Leo Esaki and his Nobel lecture on tunneling in semiconductors Ivar Giaever and his Nobel lecture on tunneling in superconductors Practical applications of spin resonance : MRI Homework exercises listed below. Numbered problems from "Introduction to Quantum Mechanics" by D. J. Griffiths Problem Set 1 (due Wed. 9/11/02 at beginning of class) :

71. Leo Esaki: Awards Won By Leo Esaki
123Awards hardwork is paid in form of awards. Awards of leo esaki. OTHERnobel,1973, PHYSICS. Enter Artist/Album. Partner Sites. Stardose.com. RealLyrics.com.
http://www.123awards.com/artist/6005.asp
hardwork is paid in form of awards Awards of Leo Esaki OTHER-NOBEL PHYSICS Enter Artist/Album
Partner Sites
Stardose.com RealLyrics.com OnlyHitLyrics.com Biography Search Engine ... privacy

72. Digitale Bibliothek - JLU Giessen
esaki, leo (1925 ) nobel Foundation WWW. Faraday, Michael (1797-1867) Zusammenstellung University of Zagreb, Faculty of Science, Department of Physics WWW.
http://dbs.ub.uni-giessen.de/links/dbs_fachinfo.php?typ=E&fach=5

73. Physics Today July 2001
Josephson's nobel Prize in Physics was awarded in 1973, eleven years afterhis discovery. He shared the prize with Giaever and leo esaki.
http://www.physicstoday.com/pt/vol-54/iss-7/p46.html
Back to Table of Contents July Articles: Time-Resolved Macromolecular Crystallography Diffusion on Semiconductor Surfaces The Nobel Laureate Versus the Graduate Student References Site Index Physics Today Home Page Current Issue Past Contents Job Ads Upcoming Meetings Buyer's Guide About Physics Today Contact Us Advertising Information Print Ad Rates and Specs Online Ad Rates and Specs Advertiser Index Product Information Information Exchange The Nobel Laureate Versus the Graduate Student John Bardeen, the leading condensed matter theorist of his day, was quite wrong when he dismissed a startling prediction by the unknown Brian Josephson.
Donald G. McDonald
In 1962, Brian Josephson, a 22-year-old research student at Cambridge University, suggested a new and surprising effect. A supercurrent, he argued, can tunnel through a thin insulating barrier. University of Illinois theorist John Bardeen disagreed, and that mattered. At age 54, Bardeen was the most celebrated solid-state theorist of his time. He had shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics with William Shockley and Walter Brattain for the invention of the transistor. He would share a second Nobel prize in 1972 with Leon Cooper and Robert Schrieffer for their 1957 solution (the BCS theory) of the long-standing riddle of superconductivity. Bardeen publicly dismissed young Josephson's tunneling-supercurrent assertion in a "Note added in proof" to a 1962 article in

74. The Nobel Prize For Physics (1901-1998)
is to watch the nobel Foundation web site at http//www.nobel.se. of superconductivityleon N. Cooper J. Robert Schrieffer 1973 1960 leo esaki Tunneling in
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Administrivia/nobel.html
[Physics FAQ] Updated October 1998 by Nathan Urban.
Updated 1997,96 by PEG.
Updated 1994 by SIC.
Original by Scott I. Chase.
The Nobel Prize for Physics (1901-1998)
The following is a complete listing of Nobel Prize awards, from the first award in 1901. Prizes were not awarded in every year. The date in brackets is the approximate date of the work. The description following the names is an abbreviation of the official citation. The Physics prize is announced near the beginning of October each year. One of the quickest ways to get the announcement is to watch the Nobel Foundation web site at http://www.nobel.se

75. NanoVentures
February 22nd and 23rd. leo esaki, the 1973 nobel laureate in physicsfor inventing the tunnel diode. leo also delivered a spectacular
http://www.nanospace.org/nanovent.htm
Which part of GREAT you did not understand?
An Unabashed Personal Report of NanoVentures 2002
(March 6th-8th, Dallas-Fort Worth) Preamble
After an intense and highly successful National Engineer-Week Asian American Award Ceremony February 22nd and 23rd), where 600 distinguished participants, from academia, industries and national laboratories from all over the nation, including the legendary Nobel laureate in physics Leo Esaki, descended on DFW for two intense days of lectures and scientific and technological gala, I did not think that the region could "crescendo" so rapidly to reach another mega-event.
Well, it did, and it was the "NanoVenture 2002" of March 6th - 8th that did it! This conference attracted over 400 participants from all over the nation and was touted as one of the first, if not the first, conferences in the venture of the nano-space.
The aim and the mission of the conference is to explore the economic impact of this new but very hot scientific and technological area. It is for this reason, the conference has less discussions of, although there was still a healthy dosage, for example, technical talks on " quantum interference " or " classical behavior of quantum dots" , and more on

76. La Repubblica/tecnologie_internet: Undici Premi Nobel Per Cambiare Il Futuro
Translate this page 1956 Il nobel è stato assegnato a William Shockley, a John Bardeen ea WalterH 1973 è stato assegnato a leo esaki ea Ivar Giaevier per le loro scoperte
http://www.repubblica.it/online/tecnologie_internet/silicio/nobel/nobel.html

Trova

Scrivi

Cronaca

Politica
...
Cinema: le recensioni

Dal transitor ai pionieri di Internet
l'evoluzione della fisica secondo Stoccolma

Undici premi Nobel
per cambiare il futuro
tunneling in semiconduttori e superconduttori. (8 dicembre 2000) Intel contro Amd la sfida eterna DALL'ARCHIVIO di Repubblica.it Rivoluzione nei microchip GLOSSARIO SCHEDA Undici Nobel per il futuro IN RETE Intel Amd Dipartimento di Fisica Isitituto nazionale ... Cnr

77. Nobel Laureates In Physics 1901 - 1996
to perform more complex searches, use the search page of the nobel Foundation Theprize was divided, with one half awarded jointly to esaki, leo, Japan, b. 1925
http://physics.hallym.ac.kr/reference/nobel/nobel-ph.html
Origin
Nobel Laureates in Physics 1901 - 1996
REVISED: Oct. 22, 1996
This page is a service of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Library . It contains a list in reverse chronological order of the award winners with brief biographical information and a description of the discovery taken from the Nobel Foundation's text describing each Laureate's discovery and other sources.
Additional information, corrections and comments are welcome
If your browser does not support keyword searching within a document, or if you wish to perform more complex searches, use the search page of the Nobel Foundation.
The Center for the History of Physics of the American Institute of Physics provides a rich supplemental resource for this subject. Credits
Explanation of institutional affiliations: CA AA WA Browse:
Physics 1996
The prize was awarded jointly to: and

78. The Nobel Prize For Physics (1901-1996)
The following is a complete listing of nobel Prize awards, from the first of superconductivityleon N. Cooper J. Robert Schrieffer 1973 leo esaki Tunneling in
http://physics.hallym.ac.kr/education/faq/nobel.html
[Physics FAQ] updated 9-OCT-1996 by PEG
updated 12-OCT-1994 by SIC
original by Scott I. Chase
The Nobel Prize for Physics (1901-1996)
The following is a complete listing of Nobel Prize awards, from the first award in 1901. Prizes were not awarded in every year. The description following the names is an abbreviation of the official citation.

79. Norwegian Inventions, Discoveries And Awards
The nobel Prize in Physics awarded by The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. 1973The prize was divided, one half being equally shared between esaki, leo,
http://www.cyberclip.com/Katrine/NorwayInfo/NorgeInv.html
Norwegian Inventions, Discoveries and Awards
Norwegian Inventions, Discoveries and Awards
Discoveries Inventions Awards
Discoveries
* Greenland
Eiríkr raudi (Eirik the Red) emigrated from Jæren in Norway to Iceland in 981 or 982 in search of a new land. The reason for his departure was apparently some unexplained local murders. From Iceland, Eirik made lots of travels, and on one of them found Greenland, which was soon colonized. But it was his son, Leif, who was going to make the biggest discovery... (see below)
* America
The Icelandic born Leif Eirikson, son of Eirik the Red (see above), followed in his father's footsteps and discovered more new land: He found a land he called Helluland (Flatstone Land, probably Baffin Island), then he sailed to Markland (Forest Land, Labrador), and from there to Vinland . The account of his voyage is preserved in Gronlendinga saga. Eiriks saga rauda has a different version: according to this, Leif put out to sea from Norway, in order to sail home to Greenland; he was driven off course, and came to an unknown land where he found self-sown wheat and vine trees. A new expedition, led by Toifinnr Karlsefni, set out for this new land, and in connection with his expedition, the saga calls the land Vinland. Traditions, it will be seen, differ, but they agree that a new land far west in the Atlantic had been discovered. The year is about A.D. 1000.

80. The Century Of The Engineer: Misunderstood Milestones
The report in 1958 of the invention of the tunnel diode by Sony Corp.'s leo esakicreated almost as much And the development earned esaki a nobel Prize in
http://www.eetimes.com/special/special_issues/millennium/milestones/holonyak.htm
Online Editions
EE TIMES

EE TIMES ASIA

EE TIMES CHINA

EE TIMES FRANCE
...
EE TIMES UK

Web Sites
CommsDesign

iApplianceWeb.com

Microwave Engineering

EEdesign
... Custom Magazines A list of upcoming NetSeminars, plus a link to the archive Successful Strategies for Integrating BluetoothTM Into a Cellular Telephone Back to Basics . Oscilloscope Measurements Jitter Measurement for High-Speed Digital Transmission ... Archive Nick Holonyak: tunneling has uses, but not in mainstream
Tunnel diodes: the transistor killers
by George Rostky The report in 1958 of the invention of the tunnel diode by Sony Corp.'s Leo Esaki created almost as much excitement as the announcement of the transistor by Bell Labs a decade earlier. This may have been because tunneling was a fundamental idea from quantum physics, and here it was in a simple p-n junction. Here was a super-fast device with switching speeds that left most transistors in the dust. As the fame of the tunnel diode spread through the electronics world, the device often took on the name of its inventor. It was widely known as the Esaki Diode. And the development earned Esaki a Nobel Prize in 1973. Before the award of that Nobel, the world was shaken when it learned that Esaki was leaving Sony in Japan to join IBM in New York State, an almost unprecedented happening. Japanese companies, especially large and reputable ones like Sony, were known for lifetime employment. Once you earned employment at an outfit like Sony, you knew that you would stay there forever or, at least, till you retired or died. So it was almost unheard of for somebody to leave, especially a high-ranking individual like Leo Esaki.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter