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         Schwartz Melvin:     more books (37)
  1. Principles of Electrodynamics by Melvin Schwartz, 1987-10-01
  2. Heptinstall's Pathology of the Kidney (2 Volume Set)
  3. Encyclopedia of Lasers & Optical Tech
  4. Exploring the Western World: Its Peoples, Cultures and Geography by Melvin Schwartz, John R. O'Connor, 1981-06
  5. Exploring American History Teachers Resource Manual by Melvin Schwartz, John O'Connor, 1986-10
  6. Exploring a Changing World by Melvin Schwartz, John O'Connor, 1993-06
  7. The new exploring the non-Western world by Melvin Schwartz, 1983
  8. The New Exploring American History by Melvin, Etal. Schwartz, 1981
  9. Lupus Nephritis (Oxford Clinical Nephrology Series)
  10. Exploring American History by Melvin Schwartz, John Richard O'Connor, 1986-10
  11. Infectious Disease Deaths in Idaho: J. R. Simplot, John Hamilton Morgan, Melvin Schwartz, Maggie Hall, Walter Parr
  12. Biography - Schwartz, Melvin (1932-2006): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2006-01-01
  13. The new exploring American history. Workbook by Melvin Schwartz, 1981
  14. Source Book on Electron Beam and Laser Welding: A Comprehensive Collection of Outstanding Articles from the Periodical and Reference Literature by Melvin M., M.D. Schwartz, 1981-06

1. Autobiography Of M. Schwartz
melvin schwartz – Autobiography. become famous for the large number of outstandingindividuals it has produced including among them four nobel Laureates in
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1988/schwartz-autobio.html
Having been born in 1932, at the peak of the great depression, I grew up in difficult times. My parents worked extraordinarily hard to give us economic stability but at the same time they managed to instill in me two qualities which became the foundation of my personal and professional life. One is an unbounded sense of optimism; the other is a strong feeling as to the importance of using one's mind for the betterment of mankind.
My interest in Physics really began at the age of 12 when I entered the Bronx High School of Science in New York. That school has become famous for the large number of outstanding individuals it has produced including among them four Nobel Laureates in Physics. The four years I spent there were certainly among the most exciting and stimulating of my life, mostly because of the interaction with other students having similar background, interest and ability. It's rather amazing how important the interaction with the one's peers can be at that age in determining one's direction and success in life.
Upon graduating from high school the path to follow was fairly obvious. The Columbia Physics Department at that time was unmatched by any in the world. Largely a product of the late

2. Melvin Schwartz - Nobel Lecture
melvin schwartz – nobel Lecture. The first high energy neutrino experiment. melvinschwartz Autobiography nobel Lecture Other Resources.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1988/schwartz-lecture.html
The first high energy neutrino experiment Nobel Lecture, December 8, 1988
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990. The Lecture in pdf-format Download
Adobe Acrobat Reader is free software that lets you view and print Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) files. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1988
Press Release

Presentation Speech

Illustrated Presentation
...
Nobel Lecture
The 1988 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified January 10, 2002 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

3. Melvin Schwartz Winner Of The 1988 Nobel Prize In Physics
melvin schwartz, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. melvin schwartz. 1988 nobel Laureate in
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1988b.html
M ELVIN S CHWARTZ
1988 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for the neutrino beam method and the demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through the discovery of the muon neutrino.
Background
    Born: 1932
    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: Digital Pathways, Inc., Mountain View, CA
Featured Internet Links 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. Schroedinger, Erwin, 1933. schwartz, melvin, 1988.
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. Schwartz, Melvin
schwartz, melvin. New York, NY, US), American physicist and entrepreneur who, alongwith Leon M. Lederman and Jack Steinberger, received the nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/532_18.html
Schwartz, Melvin
(b. Nov. 2, 1932, New York, N.Y., U.S.), American physicist and entrepreneur who, along with Leon M. Lederman and Jack Steinberger , received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1988 for their research concerning neutrino s (subatomic particles that have no electric charge and virtually no mass). Schwartz studied physics at Columbia University, New York City, and received his Ph.D. there in 1958. He taught at Columbia from 1958 to 1966 and then was a professor of physics at Stanford University from 1966 to 1983. From 1970 he was president of Digital Pathways, Inc., a company that he founded to design computer-security systems.

6. Nobel Prize Winners S-U
developing nations, schwartz, melvin, 1988, physics, US, researchin subatomic particles, Schweitzer, Albert, 1952, peace, Alsace, Schwinger
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_s-u.html
Article Year Category Country* Achievement Literary Area Saavedra Lamas, Carlos peace Argentina Sabatier, Paul chemistry France method of hydrogenating organic compounds Sachs, Nelly literature Sweden poet Sadat, Anwar el- peace Egypt Saint-John Perse literature France poet Sakharov, Andrey Dmitriyevich peace U.S.S.R. Sakmann, Bert physiology/medicine Germany discovery of how cells communicate, as related to diseases Salam, Abdus physics Pakistan unification of electromagnetism and the weak interactions of subatomic particles Samuelson, Paul economics U.S. work in scientific analysis of economic theory Samuelsson, Bengt Ingemar physiology/medicine Sweden biochemistry and physiology of prostaglandins Sanger, Frederick chemistry U.K. determination of the structure of the insulin molecule Sanger, Frederick chemistry U.K. development of chemical and biological analyses of DNA structure Sartre, Jean-Paul (declined) literature France philosopher, dramatist Sato Eisaku peace Japan Schally, Andrew Victor physiology/medicine U.S.

7. Essays On Winners Of The Nobel Prize:
The 1988 nobel Prize in Physics melvin schwartz, Leon Lederman, Jack Steinberger,and the Story of Two Neutrinos. Essays/Vol12, 32, p.216, August 7, 1989.
http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/prize/nobelwinners.html
Essays on Winners of the Nobel Prize: 'Of Nobel Class': Part 1. An Overview of ISI Studies on Highly Cited Authors and Nobel Laureates.
Essays/Vol:15, #33, p.116, August 17, 1992.
Eugene Garfield and Alfred Welljams-Dorof. "Of Nobel Class: A Citation Perspective on High Impact Research Authors" Theor. Med. 13(2): 117-35, June 1992.
Essays/Vol:15, p.118, 1992
Eugene Garfield and Alfred Welljams-Dorof. "Of Nobel Class: A Citation Perspective on High Impact Research Authors (Part 2)" Theor. Med. 13(2): 117-35, June 1992.
Essays/Vol:15, p.128, 1992.
Theoretical Medicine's Special Issue on the Nobel Prizes and Their Effect on Science.
Essays/Vol:15, #37, p.137, September 14, 1992.
B.I.B. Lindahl, "Discovery, Theory Change, and the Nobel Prize: On the Mechanisms of Scientific Evolution. An Introduction." Theor. Med (whole issue) 13(2): 97-231, 1992.
Essays/Vol:15, p.140, 1992-93
The 1991 Nobel Prize Winnersfrom Patch Clamps (Neher and Sakmann) to Spaghetti
Theory (de Gennes), Social Costs (Coase), and NMR (Ernst)Were All Citation Superstars.
Essays/Vol:15, #5, p.12, February 3, 1992.

8. Schwartz, Melvin
schwartz, melvin (1932). school has become famous for the large number of outstandingindividuals it has produced including among them four nobel Laureates in
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/S/Schwartz/Schwa
Schwartz, Melvin Having been born in 1932, at the peak of the great depression, I grew up in difficult times. My parents worked extraordinarily hard to give us economic stability but at the same time they managed to instill in me two qualities which became the foundation of my personal and professional life. One is an unbounded sense of optimism; the other is a strong feeling as to the importance of using one's mind for the betterment of mankind.
My interest in Physics really began at the age of 12 when I entered the Bronx High School of Science in New York. That school has become famous for the large number of outstanding individuals it has produced including among them four Nobel Laureates in Physics. The four years I spent there were certainly among the most exciting and stimulating of my life, mostly because of the interaction with other students having similar background, interest and ability. It's rather amazing how important the interaction with the one's peers can be at that age in determining one's direction and success in life.
Upon graduating from high school the path to follow was fairly obvious. The Columbia Physics Department at that time was unmatched by any in the world. Largely a product of the late Professor I.I. Rabi, it was a-department which was to provide the ambiance for six Nobel Prize pieces of work in widely diverse fields during the next thirteen years. And, in addition, it was the host for a period of time to another half dozen or so future Nobel Laureates either as students or as post-doctoral researchers. I know of no other institution either before or since that has come close to that record.

9. Melvin Shwartz - CIRS
schwartz, melvin Professor of Particle Physics at Columbia University, New York,USA. 1988 nobel Laureate in Physics, with Leon M. Lederman and Jack Steinberger
http://www.cirs.net/researchers/physics/shwartz.htm
SCHWARTZ, MELVIN
Professor of Particle Physics at Columbia University , New York, USA. 1988 Nobel Laureate in Physics , with Leon M. Lederman and Jack Steinberger, " for the neutrino beam method and the demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through the discovery of the muon neutrino ." Research interests :
Prior experiments in which he has played a major role include :

1. Discovery of the muon type neutrino (1962). This experiment, carried out at Columbia in collaboration with Leon Lederman and Jack Steinberger, received the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physics.
[home]

10. Brookhaven Nobel Prizes
BNL's next nobel Prize was awarded in 1988, when a trio of researchers Leon Lederman,melvin schwartz and Jack Steinberger, at the time all of Columbia
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/history/Nobel/Nobel_88.html
Environment Newsroom Administration Directory ... More Brookhaven history
Discovery of the Muon-Neutrino, 1988
BNL's next Nobel Prize was awarded in 1988, when a trio of researchers received the physics prize for their 1962 discovery of the muon-neutrino. Leon Lederman, Melvin Schwartz and Jack Steinberger, at the time all of Columbia University, made their discovery at the brand-new Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS). At the time, only the electron-neutrino was known, and the scientists wondered if they could find more types of these ghostlike particles that pass through everything. The AGS, then the most powerful accelerator in the world, was capable of producing the beam needed.
Jack Steinberger, Melvin Schwartz and Leon Lederman The experiment used a beam of the AGS's energetic protons to produce a shower of pi mesons, which traveled 70 feet toward a 5,000-ton steel wall made of old battleship plates. On the way, they decayed into muons and neutrinos, but only the latter particles could pass through the wall into a neon-filled detector called a spark chamber. There, the impact of neutrinos on aluminum plates produced muon spark trails that could be detected and photographed proving the existence of muon-neutrinos. The experiment's use of the first-ever neutrino beam paved the way for scientists to use these particles in research at the AGS and around the world.

11. Ray Davis Jr. Wins Nobel Prize In Physics
Experiments at the AGS resulted in the discovery of the muonneutrino, for whichthe nobel Prize was awarded to Leon Lederman, melvin schwartz and Jack
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2002/bnlpr100802.htm
For more information, contact:
Pete Genzer

Mona S. Rowe
October 8, 2002 Electronic newsroom
Brookhaven Lab’s Raymond Davis Jr. Wins Nobel Prize in Physics
NOTE: Extensive background information on Dr. Davis is located here UPTON, NY - Raymond Davis Jr., a retired chemist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, has won the Nobel Prize in Physics for detecting solar neutrinos, ghostlike particles produced in the nuclear reactions that power the sun. Davis shares the prize with Masatoshi Koshiba of Japan, and Riccardo Giacconi of the U.S. In awarding the prize to Davis and Koshiba, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences cited both “for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, in particular for the detection of cosmic neutrinos.” Giacconi was cited “for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, which have led to the discovery of cosmic X-ray sources.” The Nobel laureates will be awarded their prizes at a ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden, on December 10. The prize consists of a diploma, a medal and 10 million Swedish kroner (roughly 1 million U.S. dollars) shared among the recipients. “Neutrinos are fascinating particles, so tiny and fast that they can pass straight through everything, even the earth itself, without even slowing down,” said Davis. “When I began my work, I was intrigued by the idea of learning something new. The interesting thing about doing new experiments is that you never know what the answer is going to be!”

12. Nobel Laureate Named I. I. Rabi Prof. Of Physics
nobel Prizewinning physicist melvin schwartz, a Columbia alumnus anda faculty member, has been named II Rabi Professor of Physics.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/record/record2003.19.html
Nobel Laureate Named I. I. Rabi Prof. of Physics
Photograph : Melvin Schwartz, Photo credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory. Nobel Prize-winning physicist Melvin Schwartz, a Columbia alumnus and a faculty member, has been named I.I. Rabi Professor of Physics. His appointment was made by the University Trustees and announced by President Rupp. Schwartz, professor of physics at Columbia since 1991, shared the Nobel Prize in 1988 with Columbia professors Leon Lederman and Jack Steinberger for their discovery of the muon neutrino. The I.I. Rabi Professorship was established in 1985 as a tribute to the eminent Nobel Prize winner who guided Columbia's Department of Physics for more than three decades. Rabi died in 1988. Schwartz teaches the Undergraduate Seminar in contemporary physics and astronomy and has provided students with an introduction to some of the most exciting developments in 20th-century physics: relativity, quantum mechanics, elementary particle theory and cosmology. His research focuses on high energy experimental particle physics with particular emphasis on weak interactions. He received the A.B. degree in 1953 and the Ph.D. in 1958 from Columbia. After working at Brookhaven National Laboratory as a research scientist from 1956 to 1958, he joined the faculty of Columbia in 1958 as assistant professor of physics and was appointed full professor in 1963. He resigned in 1966 to accept an appointment as professor of physics at Stanford.

13. 5 College Alumni Nobel Laureates Are Alexander Hamilton Winners
melvin schwartz '53, who won the nobel in Physics in 1988, and. Julian S.Schwinger '36, posthumously, winner of the nobel in Physics in 1965.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/record/archives/vol21/vol21_iss10/record2110.15.html
5 College Alumni Nobel Laureates Are Alexander Hamilton Winners
Photograph : Leon N. Cooper, '51.
Photograph : Roald Hoffman, '58.
Photograph : Norman F. Ramsey Jr. '35.
Photograph : Melvin Schwartz, '53.
Photograph : Julian S. Schwinger, '36.
Columbia College, which has graduated more Nobel laureates in science than any other American college, will present to five of them its highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton Medal, this Thursday in Low Rotunda. "These are humanist-scientists, at home with Hamlet and the atom, whose shared experience of Columbia's famed core curriculum sets them apart," said President Rupp. They are:
  • Leon N. Cooper '51, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1972;
  • Roald Hoffmann '58, winner of the Nobel in Chemistry in 1981;
  • Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. '35, Nobel laureate in Physics in 1989;
  • Melvin Schwartz '53, who won the Nobel in Physics in 1988, and
  • Julian S. Schwinger '36, posthumously, winner of the Nobel in Physics in 1965. Clarice Schwinger, his widow, will accept the award.
A total of nine Nobel Prize winners in science (physics, chemistry and physiology or medicine) are graduates of the College, the record for undergraduate degrees earned at any one school. The other four received the Hamilton Medal in a similar celebration 34 years ago, in 1961. Generally, the medal is awarded to only one individual each year. The medal has been given since 1947 to honor faculty, former faculty or alumni for "distinguished service and accomplishment in any field of human endeavor." Previous winners also include Columbia President Dwight D. Eisenhower and alumni Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.

14. Jewish Nobel Prize Laureates - Physics
Year, nobel Laureate, Country of birth. 1988, schwartz, melvin for the neutrino beammethod and the demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through
http://www.science.co.il/Nobel-Physics.asp
Israel Science and Technology Homepage
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Nobel Prize Subject Biomedical Chemistry Economics Physics ... Literature Sort options Country Name Year Order A - Z Z - A Show citation Yes No
Jewish Laureates of Nobel Prize in Physics
Year Nobel Laureate Country of birth Alferov, Zhores I.
"for basic work on information and communication technology" Russia Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude
"for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light" Algeria Lee, David M.
"for their discovery of superfluidity in helium-3" USA Osheroff, Douglas D.
"for their discovery of superfluidity in helium-3" USA Perl, Martin L.
"for the discovery of the tau lepton " Russia Reines, Frederick
"for the detection of the neutrino" USA Charpak, Georges
"for his invention and development of particle detectors, in particular the multiwire proportional chamber" Poland 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 Lederman, Leon M.

15. Prémios Nobel
LEDERMAN, LEON M., USA, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, IL, * 1922;schwartz, melvin, USA, Digital Servidor da Fundação nobel, Suécia. Activ.
http://pintopc.home.cern.ch/pintopc/www/divers/Premio_nobel.html
* Physics 1976 - The prize was divided equally between: RICHTER, BURTON, U.S.A., Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, CA, * 1931;
TING, SAMUEL C. C., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, (CERN - European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), * 1936:
"for their pioneering work in the discovery of a heavy elementary particle of a new kind". - The prize was awarded jointly to: RUBBIA, CARLO, Italy, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1934; and
VAN DER MEER, SIMON, the Netherlands, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1925:
"for their decisive contributions to the large project, which led to the discovery of the field particles W and Z, communicators of weak interaction". * Physics 1998 - The prize was awarded jointly to: LEDERMAN, LEON M., U.S.A., Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, IL, * 1922;
SCHWARTZ, MELVIN, U.S.A., Digital Pathways, Inc., Mountain View, CA, * 1932; and
STEINBERGER, JACK, U.S.A., CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1921 (in Bad Kissingen, FRG):
"for the neutrino beam method and the demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through the discovery of the muon neutrino".

16. Melvin Schwartz
melvin schwartz. This experiment, carried out at Columbia in collaboration with LeonLederman and Jack Steinberger, received the 1988 nobel Prize in Physics.
http://phys.columbia.edu/faculty/schwartz.htm
Prof. Melvin Schwartz
email: none telephone: (212) 854-8128
Melvin Schwartz
Ph.D. 1958
Columbia University
Particle Physics My current research interests are involved with early experiments on the new Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), to be completed at Brookhaven in 1997. It is expected that highly energetic collisions between relativistic heavy nuclei will lead to a totally new state of matterÑQuark-Gluon Plasma (QGP)Ñin which the vacuum is excited into a collection of quarks and gluons that do not have the conventional hadronic structure. A current experiment being planned will search for characteristics of this new form of matter. Prior experiments in which I have played a major role include: 1. Discovery of the muon type neutrino (1962). This experiment, carried out at Columbia in collaboration with Leon Lederman and Jack Steinberger, received the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physics. 2. Determination of charge asymmetry in KLÞ p± m+ n (1967). This experiment was one of the early demonstrations of CP violation in in K leptonic decay. 3. Production and detection of p - m Coulomb bound states (1976Ð82). In this series of experiments we produced hydrogen-like atoms made up of pions and muons.

17. SLAC Library Conferences Experiments Institutions
schwartz, melvin (Columbia U.) PAPERS EXPTS STUDENTS Update your record Ph.D.institution Columbia U. (1958) Undergrad Columbia U. http//www.nobel.se
http://usparc.ihep.su/spires/find/hepnames/www?note=nobel prize&sequence=note(d)

18. Pictures Gallery Of The Nobel Prize Winners In Physics
Translate this page The nobel Prize in Physics. 1998. Robert B. Laughlin Horst L. Störmer DanielC. Tsui 1997. 1988. Leon M. Lederman melvin schwartz Jack Steinberger 1987.
http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physpicnobel.html
The Nobel Prize in Physics
Robert B. Laughlin
Daniel C. Tsui
Steven Chu
...
Hannes Olof Gosta Alfven

Louis Eugene Felix Neel
Murray Gell-Mann
Luis Walter Alvarez
Hans Albrecht Bethe
Alfred Kastler
Richard Phillips Feynman

Julian Seymour Schwinger

Sin-Itiro Tomonaga
Nikolai Gennadievich Basov
Alexander Mikhailovich Prokhorov

Charles Hard Townes
Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen

Maria Goeppert-Mayer
...
Sir Edward Victor Appleton
Percy Williams Bridgman
Wolfgang Ernst Pauli
Isidor Isaac Rabi
Otto Stern
None
None
None
Ernest Orlando Lawrence
Enrico Fermi
Clinton Joseph Davisson

Sir George Paget Thomson
...
Sir James Chadwick
None
Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac
Werner Karl Heisenberg
None
Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman
Prince Louis-Victor Pierre Raymond de Broglie
Sir Owen Willans Richardson
Arthur Holly Compton

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Jean Baptiste Perrin
James Franck

Gustav Ludwig Hertz
Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn
Robert Andrews Millikan
...
Albert Einstein
Charles Eduard Guillaume
Johannes Stark
Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck
Charles Glover Barkla
None
Sir William Henry Bragg
Sir William Lawrence Bragg
Max Theodor Felix von Laue
Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
... Guglielmo Marconi
Gabriel Jonas Lippmann
Albert Abraham Michelson
Sir Joseph John Thomson
Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard
John William Strutt (Lord Rayleigh)
...
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
Donated by Christopher Walker, University of Ulster

19. Autobiography Of M. Schwartz
melvin schwartz. That school has become famous for the large number of outstandingindividuals it has produced including among them four nobel Laureates in
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1988/schwartz-autobio.html

20. University Of Chicago News: Nobel Laureates
The nobel Prize in Physics 1988 with Leon Lederman and Dr. melvin schwartz “forthe neutrino beam method and the demonstration of the doublet structure of
http://www-news.uchicago.edu/resources/nobel/physics.html
University of Chicago News: Resources
University of Chicago Physics Nobel Laureates Seventy-four Laureates have been faculty, students or researchers at the University of Chicago. Twenty-five of those Laureates won prizes in Physics.
Masatoshi Koshiba

Research Associate in the Enrico Fermi Institute The Nobel Prize in Physics 2002
with Raymond Davis Jr. and Riccardo Giacconi
Daniel C. Tsui

S.M., 1963; Ph.D., 1967. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1998
Jerome I. Friedman

A.B., 1950; S.M., 1953; Ph.D., 1956. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1990
with Henry Kendall and Richard Taylor
Jack Steinberger
S.B., 1942; Ph.D., 1949. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1988 with Leon Lederman and Dr. Melvin Schwartz Leon M. Lederman Frank L. Sulzberger Professor in the College The Nobel Prize in Physics 1988 with Dr. Jack Steinberger and Dr. Melvin Schwartz Subramanyan Chandrasekhar Research Associate in the , 1937-1938; Assistant Professor, 1938-1942; Associate Professor, 1942-1943; Professor, 1943-1952; Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor in the Physics , and the Enrico Fermi Institute The Nobel Prize in Physics 1983 with William Fowler James W. Cronin

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