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         Glaser Donald A:     more detail
  1. Neurobiologists: Roger Wolcott Sperry, Wade Regehr, Colin Blakemore, Achim Peters, Donald A. Glaser, George Wald, Edward Kravitz
  2. United States Physicist Introduction: Franco Rasetti, Edward Morley, Donald A. Glaser, F. J. Duarte, Suh Nam Pyo, C. R. Hagen, Douglas Warrick
  3. Hochschullehrer (Ann Arbor): Donald A. Glaser, Adrian Piper, Angus Campbell, John Dewey, Peter Hacker, Rudolf Arnheim, Andrei S. Markovits (German Edition)
  4. Indians & Energy: Exploitation and Opportunity in the American Southwest
  5. ALVAREZ, LUIS (1911-1988): An entry from Gale's <i>World of Earth Science</i>
  6. Why we don't like people, by Donald Anderson Laird, 1933

1. Donald A. Glaser - Biography
donald Arthur glaser was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on September glaser has receivedmany honours for his work, among in which he was awarded the nobel Prize for
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1960/glaser-bio.html
Donald Arthur Glaser was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 21, 1926, the son of William J. Glaser, a businessman, and his wife Lena. He received his early education in the public schools of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and took his B.Sc. degree in physics and mathematics at the Case Institute of Technology in 1946. His first original research is described in his bachelor's thesis and consists of an electron diffraction study of the properties of thin metallic films evaporated onto crystalline metal substrates.
After serving as a teacher of mathematics at the Case Institute of Technology during the spring of 1946, he began his graduate study at the California Institute of Technology in the autumn of the same year, finishing his Ph.D. work in the autumn of 1949, and receiving his degree in physics and mathematics officially in 1950. His doctoral thesis research was an experimental study of the momentum spectrum of high energy cosmic ray and mesons at sea level.
Glaser began his career of full-time teaching and research in the Physics Department of the University of Michigan in the autumn of 1949, being promoted to the rank of Professor in 1957. In 1959 he became Professor of Physics at the

2. Physics 1960
The nobel Prize in Physics 1960. for the invention of the bubble chamber . donaldArthur glaser. USA. donald A. glaser Biography nobel Lecture Interview. 1959, 1961.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1960/
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1960
"for the invention of the bubble chamber" Donald Arthur Glaser USA University of California
Berkeley, CA, USA b. 1926 The Nobel Prize in Physics 1960
Presentation Speech
Donald A. Glaser
Biography
...
Interview
The 1960 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
...
Peace
Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000
The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

3. Donald A. Glaser Winner Of The 1960 Nobel Prize In Physics
nobel News Links donald glaser reaction upon winning the nobel Prize.Links added by nobel Internet Archive visitors add your own link
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1960a.html
D ONALD A G LASER
1960 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for the invention of the bubble chamber.
Background
    Born: 1926
    Residence: U.S.A
    Affiliation: University of California, Berkeley, CA
Featured Internet Links

    Search WWW Search The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Nobel News Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

4. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Physics
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS. Name, Year Awarded.Alferov, Zhores I. 2000. Giaever, Ivar, 1973. glaser, donald A. 1960.
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS
Name Year Awarded Alferov, Zhores I. Alfven, Hannes Alvarez, Luis W. Anderson, Carl David ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

5. Glaser, Donald A.
in full donald ARTHUR glaser (b. Sept. 21, 1926, Cleveland, Ohio, US) American physicist,winner of the nobel Prize for Physics in 1960 for his invention and
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/236_21.html
Glaser, Donald A.
in full DONALD ARTHUR GLASER (b. Sept. 21, 1926, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.) American physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1960 for his invention and development of the bubble chamber a research instrument used to observe the behaviour of subatomic particles. After graduating from Case Institute of Technology, Cleveland, in 1946, Glaser attended California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, where he received his Ph.D. in physics in 1949, then began teaching at the University of Michigan, where he was professor of physics until 1959. There he conceived the idea for the bubble chamber, which has become a widely used instrument because it allows precise measurement of the paths of subatomic particles. At the age of 34, Glaser was one of the youngest scientists ever to be awarded a Nobel Prize. In 1959 he joined the staff of the University of California at Berkeley, where he became professor of physics and molecular biology in 1964.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Peter Galison, "Bubble Chambers and the Experimental Workplace," in Peter Achinstein and Owen Hannaway (eds.), Observation, Experiment, and Hypothesis in Modern Physical Science

6. Nobel Prize Winners G-I
Gjellerup, Karl Adolph, 1917, literature, Denmark, novelist. glaser,donald A. 1960, physics, US, development of the bubble chamber, Glashow
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_g-i.html
Article Year Category Country* Achievement Literary Area Gabor, Dennis physics U.K. invention of holography Gajdusek, D. Carleton physiology/medicine U.S. studies of origin and spread of infectious diseases Galsworthy, John literature U.K. novelist literature Colombia novelist, journalist, social critic peace Mexico Gasser, Herbert Spencer physiology/medicine U.S. researches on differentiated functions of nerve fibres Gell-Mann, Murray physics U.S. classification of elementary particles and their interactions Gennes, Pierre-Gilles de physics France discovery of general rules for behaviour of molecules Giaever, Ivar physics U.S. tunneling in semiconductors and superconductors Giauque, William Francis chemistry U.S. behaviour of substances at extremely low temperatures literature France novelist, essayist Gilbert, Walter chemistry U.S. development of chemical and biological analyses of DNA structure Gilman, Alfred G. physiology/medicine U.S. discovery of cell signalers called G-proteins Gjellerup, Karl Adolph literature Denmark novelist Glaser, Donald A.

7. Library: Nobel Laureates
donald A. glaser 1960 nobel Prize for Physics. Press conference for nobelPrize to donald glaser with Glenn Seaborg at left, November 1960.
http://www-library.lbl.gov/teid/tmLib/nobellaureates/LibD_Glaser.htm
Donald A. Glaser
1960 Nobel Prize for Physics Presentation of Award
Acceptance Speech

Biography Submitted by Dr. Glaser to the Nobel Committee

Dr. Donald Glaser with Bubble Chamber Professor K. Siegbahn, member of the Swedish Academy of Sciences:
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies and Gentlemen.
Dr. Donald Glaser with xenon bubble chamber, taken in Bevatron, April 7, 1960.
The situation is completely different in the nuclear physics of today, where one now has at one's disposal particle accelerators with energies as high as 25 billion volts, for example the accelerator which has recently been built at the European nuclear research center in Geneva. In other words, energies which are more than 1,000 times larger than those which were earlier obtainable. In order to be able to register such particles during the entire time of flight interval, one would be forced to use a Wilson-chamber of the inconceivable size of 100 meters or more. It is obviously necessary to use a medium other than gas in order to be able to bring such particles to rest. Donald Glaser has succeeded in solving this problem and his so-called "bubble-chamber" is the high energy nuclear physics counterpart to the low energy nuclear physics

8. Library: Nobel Laureates
Segre and Owen Chamberlain 1960 Prize for Physics donald A. glaser 1961 Prize LBNLImage Database Home Page Public Information Dept.'s nobel Laureates Page.
http://www-library.lbl.gov/teid/tmLib/nobellaureates/LibNobelLaureates.htm
LBNL Nobel Prize Winners 1939 Prize for Physics - Ernest O. Lawrence
1951 Prize for Chemistry - Glenn Seaborg and Edwin McMillan

1959 Prize for Physics - Emilio Segre and Owen Chamberlain

1960 Prize for Physics - Donald A. Glaser
...
1986 Prize for Chemistry - Yuan T. Lee

For additional photographs and information see:
LBNL Image Database Home Page

Public Information Dept.'s Nobel Laureates Page

Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Last modified Wednesday, 29-May-02 16:04:31
webmaster-library@lbl.gov

9. Glaser, Donald Arthur (1926-) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biogr
glaser, donald Arthur (1926), He called his new detector the bubble chamber,and was awarded in 1960 nobel Prize in physics for its discovery.
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Glaser.html
Branch of Science Physicists Nationality American ... Physics Prize
Glaser, Donald Arthur (1926-)

American physicist who reversed the principle of the cloud chamber allowing a superheated liquid to boil about ions, forming drops of gas in a liquid as opposed to bubbles of liquid in a gas He called his new detector the bubble chamber and was awarded in 1960 Nobel Prize in physics for its discovery.
Author: Eric W. Weisstein

10. Display Tag Donald Glaser At Nobel Prize Press Conference LBNL Image Library
LBNL Image Library Collection BERKELEYLAB/PEOPLE/nobel-LAUREATES.donald glaser at nobel Prize press conference. donald glaser
http://imglib.lbl.gov/ImgLib/COLLECTIONS/BERKELEY-LAB/PEOPLE/NOBEL-LAUREATES/ind
LBNL Image Library Collection BERKELEY-LAB/PEOPLE/NOBEL-LAUREATES
Donald Glaser at Nobel Prize press conference
Image File
Title
Donald Glaser at Nobel Prize press conference
Title
Don Glaser Nobel press conference
Description
At the Nobel Prize press conference, Dr. Donald Glaser (right) is introduced to newspapermen by Glenn Seaborg, Chancellor of the University of California.
People
Glenn Seaborg, Don Glaser
Date
Citation Caption
Magnet, Vol. 4, No. 11, November, 1960
Date
November 1960
People
Donald Glaser and Glenn Seaborg
TEID Doc ID
XBD9703-00781.TIF

Fetch hi-resolution file(7.6M)

11. Display Tag Donald Glaser Awarded Nobel Prize In Physics LBNL Image Library
LBNL Image Library Collection BERKELEYLAB/PEOPLE/nobel-LAUREATES.donald glaser awarded nobel Prize in physics. donald glaser
http://imglib.lbl.gov/ImgLib/COLLECTIONS/BERKELEY-LAB/PEOPLE/NOBEL-LAUREATES/ind
LBNL Image Library Collection BERKELEY-LAB/PEOPLE/NOBEL-LAUREATES
Donald Glaser awarded Nobel Prize in physics
Image File
Title
Donald Glaser awarded Nobel Prize in physics
Description
Dr. Donald Glaser was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics in 1960 for his invention of the bubble chamber.
Date
People
Donald Glaser
TEID Doc ID
XBD 9607-03552.TIF

Fetch hi-resolution file(13.6M)

12. Glaser, Donald Arthur
glaser, donald Arthur (1926 glaser has received many honours for his work, among whichcan be 1960, the year in which he was awarded the nobel Prize for Physics
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/G/Glaser/1.html
Glaser, Donald Arthur
He was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 21, 1926, the son of William J. Glaser, a businessman, and his wife Lena. He received his early education in the public schools of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and took his B.Sc. degree in physics and mathematics at the Case Institute of Technology in 1946. His first original research is described in his bachelor's thesis and consists of an electron diffraction study of the properties of thin metallic films evaporated onto crystalline metal substrates.
After serving as a teacher of mathematics at the Case Institute of Technology during the spring of 1946, he began his graduate study at the California Institute of Technology in the autumn of the same year, finishing his Ph.D. work in the autumn of 1949, and receiving his degree in physics and mathematics officially in 1950. His doctoral thesis research was an experimental study of the momentum spectrum of high energy cosmic ray and mesons at sea level.
Other experiments yielded information on pion-proton scattering, parity violation in non-leptonic hyperon decay, and the branching ratios in positive K meson decay.

13. UR Department Of Mathematics - Letter From Donald Glaser
Up From donald A. glaser PhD, ScD Professor of Physics and of Neurobiology Universityof California at Berkeley nobel Laureate in Physics March 4, 1996.
http://www.math.rochester.edu/renaissance/letters/glaser.html
From: Donald A. Glaser PhD, ScD
Professor of Physics and of Neurobiology
University of California at Berkeley
Nobel Laureate in Physics March 4, 1996 Dr. Thomas Jackson, President
The University of Rochester
Administration 240
Rochester, NY 14627
Dear Dr. Jackson, Rochester's move to seriously weaken its program in mathematics is difficult to understand at a school long known for real strength in physics and world-wide leadership in optics. After reducing the size of the permanent faculty by more than half, terminating the graduate program and relying on adjuncts for undergraduate teaching, it is hard to imagine that you will be able to attract top-level students in the physical sciences- graduate or undergraduate. In the areas in which I have done research, high energy physics and human vision, mathematical knowledge has often been an important part of understanding. The University of Rochester has been an outstanding contributor to both fields. On many occasions I have attended the famous Rochester Conferences in High Energy Physics, and later, workshops on optics and vision. Without a serious mathematics department, it is hard to imagine the University of Rochester remaining in the front ranks of American Universities in these and other fields. I hope my letter will be helpful in reaching a healthy balance in the face of the very difficult problems facing Rochester and all of our universities. Although I have no particular relationship with the University of Rochester, I believe that the weakening of any of our great universities is a weakening of our country, its culture, and its economy.

14. "A CENTURY OF NOBEL PRIZES" Programme
donald glaser, donald glaser, Prix nobel de Physique, Berkeley;
http://www.unesco.org/bpi/uip/prog-vf.htm
8 - 9 - 10 avril 1999
Salle I de l'UNESCO
7, place Fontenoy
75007 Paris
FRANCE
Programmme:
8 avril - " Les grands défis à relever au XXIème siècle"
9 avril - "L'évolution de la nature et du projet de la science"
10 avril- "Science et société" Réservations Inscriptions, Informations à
Université interdisciplinaire de Paris
29 rue Viala - 75015 Paris - FRANCE Tel : +33 (0)1 45 78 85 52 Fax : +33 (0)1 45 78 85 09 E-mail : uipfra@wordnet.fr Programme: 8 avril 1999 " Les grands défis à relever au XXIème siècle" Introductions by Federico Mayor , Director-General of UNESCO, and Rene Lenoir , Introductions par M. Federico Mayor, Directeur General de l'UNESCO et M. René Lenoir, Conseiller aupres du Président de la République pour les affairs sociales, ancien Ministre, ancien Directeur de l'ENA. Table Ronde: Baruch Blumberg , Prix Nobel de Médecine, Philadelphie Christian de Duve , Prix Nobel de Médecine, Bruxelles Mario Molina , Prix Nobel de Chimie, MIT Andras Szollosi-Nagy , Directeur de la Division des sciences de l'eau de l'UNESCO Anne Dambricourt , Palaeontologiste, CNRS Gilles-Eric Seralini , Biologiste moleculaire, Université de Caen David Elbaz , Astrophysicien CEA Programme: 9 avril 1999 « L'évolution de la nature et du projet de la science» AU-DELA DES CONCEPTS FAMILIERS
  • "Une transformation complète de notre vision du monde."

15. Science Center Nobel Laureates
sky by a highflying jet airplane, donald A. glaser's glaser, who received his BSin Physics from the Applied Sciences (1946), received the 1960 nobel Prize in
http://www.cwru.edu/menu/sciencecenter/nobel_laureates.htm
middle Nobel Laureates CWRU Home Page Welcome to CWRU! Admissions Academics University Departments Computing Resources University Libraries Research Student Life Alumni Relations News of CWRU Newsstand CWRU Directory Master Plan University Library Career Planning and Placement Undergraduate Admissions School of Graduate Studies Office of University Communication Fri. Apr 18 2003 Those professors and/or graduates from Case Western Reserve University
who have been awarded the highest professional honor in the world:

The Nobel Prize
Research at CWRU CWRU Legacies of Science Biology Hall Anne and M. Roger ... Home df Berg, Paul Chemistry Olah, George A - Chemistry. Michelson, Albert Abraham - Physics Reines, Frederick - Physics Kusch, Polykarp

16. Physics 1960
The nobel Prize in Physics 1960. for the invention of the bubble chamber .donald Arthur glaser. USA. University of California Berkeley, CA, USA. 1926.
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1960/

17. Biography Of DA Glaser
donald Arthur glaser was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on September glaser has receivedmany honours for his work, among in which he was awarded the nobel Prize for
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1960/glaser-bio.html

18. Berkeley Lab Nobel Laureates
nine researchers at this Lab have been awarded the nobel Prize. 1960 donald A.glaser donald A. glaser, Physics Division, for the invention of the bubble
http://www.lbl.gov/LBL-PID/Nobel-laureates.html
Since its inception, nine researchers at this Lab have been awarded the Nobel Prize. This article tells the story of the science behind each of the Nobels. In addition, the links below take you to the laureates' acceptance speeches and their biographies. 1939: Ernest Orlando Lawrence Ernest Orlando Lawrence, founder of the Berkeley Lab, for "the invention and development of the cyclotron, and for the results thereby attained, especially with regard to artificial radioelements." 1951: Glenn T. Seaborg Glenn T. Seaborg, with Edwin M. McMillan for "their discoveries in the chemistry of the transuranic elements." 1951: Edwin M. McMillan Edwin M. McMillan, former Director of the Berkeley Lab, with Glenn T. Seaborg for "their discoveries in the chemistry of the transuranic elements." 1959: Owen Chamberlain Owen Chamberlain, with Emilio Segre, for "their discovery of the antiproton." 1959: Emilio G. Segre

19. Berkeley Lab's Nine Nobel Laureates
Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have been awarded the nobel Prize. plusLuis Alvarez, Melvin Calvin, Owen Chamberlain, donald glaser, Edwin McMillan
http://www.lbl.gov/LBL-PID/Nine-Nobel-laureates.html
Berkeley Lab's Nine Nobel Laureates
By Lynn Yarris, LCYarris@LBL.gov The Nobel Prize is an accolade to achievement and the highest award in science. Nine Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have been awarded the Nobel Prize. The laureates five in physics, four in chemistry include the Laboratory's founder Ernest O. Lawrence, plus Luis Alvarez, Melvin Calvin, Owen Chamberlain, Donald Glaser, Edwin McMillan, Glenn Seaborg, Emilio Segre, and Yuan T. Lee. The story of Berkeley Lab's Nobel laureates begins with the discovery of uranium in 1879. Uranium was assigned number 92 on the periodic table, and was declared by many scientists to be the table's upper limit. In 1934, however, the great Italian physicist Enrico Fermi announced that bombarding an element with neutrons could transmute or convert that element to the next higher number. Fermi and his group then proceeded to blast uranium with neutrons in an effort to create element 93. They thought they had done so, naming their creation "uranium X," but subsequent efforts by others to repeat their experiments revealed that what the Fermi group had actually done was split the uranium atom in two a process called "nuclear fission." A multitude of experiments blossomed from this revelation and in 1940

20. Caltech Academic Village - Nobel Laureates
Ahmed H. Zewail, Chemistry 1999 Faculty. nobel Laureates, Retired Facultyand Alumni Anderson Faculty. glaser, donald A. (PhD '50) Physics 1960.
http://bookstore.caltech.edu/nobellist.html
NOBEL LAUREATES
Nobel Laureates Currently on Faculty David Baltimore , Physiology or Medicine 1975 President; Faculty Edward B. Lewis , (PhD '42) Physiology or Medicine 1995 Faculty Rudolph A. Marcus , Chemistry 1992 Faculty Ahmed H. Zewail , Chemistry 1999 Faculty Nobel Laureates, Retired Faculty and Alumni Anderson, Carl D. (BS '27, PhD '30) Physics 1936 Faculty
Beadle, George W. Physiology or Medicine 1958 Faculty Delbrück, Max Physiology or Medicine 1969 Faculty Dulbecco, Renato Physiology or Medicine 1975 Former Faculty Feynman, Richard P. Physics 1965 Faculty Fowler, William A. (PhD '36) Physics 1983 Faculty Gell-Mann, Murray Physics 1969 Faculty Glaser, Donald A. (PhD '50) Physics 1960 Lipscomb, William N. (PhD '46) Chemistry 1976 Merton, Robert C. MS '67 Economics 1997 McMillan, Edwin M. (BS '28, MS '29) Chemistry 1951 Millikan, Robert A. Physics 1923 Faculty Morgan, Thomas H. Physiology or Medicine 1933 Faculty Mossbauer, Rudolf Physics 1961 Faculty Osheroff, Douglas D. (BS '67) Physics 1996

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