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         Vleck John H Van:     more detail
  1. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Atomic, Molecular and Solid-State Theory and Quantum Biology, held in Honor of John H. Van Vleck at Sanibel Island, Florida, January 18-23, 1971. by Per-Olov (ed) Lowdin, 1971
  2. Genetics for the Animal Sciences by L. Dale; Oltenacu, Elizabeth; Pollack, John Van Vleck, 1986-01-01

1. John H. Van Vleck - Autobiography
john H. van vleck – Autobiography. was at Minnesota that I met Abigail Pearson,a student there, whom I married June 10, 1927, and on nobel Day, December
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1977/vleck-autobio.html
I was born in Middletown, Connecticut, March 13, 1899 where my father and grandfather were respectively professors of mathematics and of astronomy at Wesleyan University . However, when I was seven years old father accepted a professorship at the University of Wisconsin, so I grew up in Madison, Wisconsin, where I attended the public schools, and graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1920. As a sort of revolt against having two generations of academic forbears, I vowed as a child that I would not be a college professor, but after a semester of graduate work at Harvard, I outgrew my childish prejudices, and realized that the life work for which I was best qualified was that of a physicist, not of the experimental variety, but in an academic environment.
I have been lucky in a number of respects. Coming from an academic family, I had invaluable parental guidance or advice at various times. At Harvard I took most of my courses under Professor Bridgman or Professor Kemble. The latter's course on quantum theory fascinated me, so I decided to write my doctor's thesis under Kemble's supervision. He was the one person in America at that time qualified to direct purely theoretical research in quantum atomic physics. My doctor's thesis was the calculation of the binding energy of a certain model of the helium atom, which Kemble and

2. John H. Van Vleck - Nobel Lecture
john H. van vleck – nobel Lecture. Quantum mechanics The key to understanding magnetism. johnH. van vleck Autobiography nobel Lecture Banquet Speech. 1976, 1978.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1977/vleck-lecture.html
Quantum mechanics
The key to understanding magnetism Nobel Lecture, December 8, 1977
From Nobel Lectures , Physics 1971-1980. 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 1977
Press Release

Presentation Speech
Philip W. Anderson ...
Banquet Speech
The 1977 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified September 25, 2002 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

3. John H. Van Vleck Winner Of The 1977 Nobel Prize In Physics
john H. van vleck, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. john H. van vleck. 1977 nobel Laureate
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1977c.html
J OHN H V AN V LECK
1977 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for their fundamental theoretical investigations of the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems.
Background

    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
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
vleck, john H. van, 1977. Back to The nobel Prize Internet Archive Literature * Peace * Chemistry * Physics * Economics * Medicine
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. Van Vleck, John H.
van vleck, john H.,. in full john HASBROUCK van vleck (b. March 13,1899, Middletown, Conn., USd. Oct. 27, 1980, Cambridge, Mass
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/617_69.html
Van Vleck, John H.,
in full JOHN HASBROUCK VAN VLECK (b. March 13, 1899, Middletown, Conn., U.S.d. Oct. 27, 1980, Cambridge, Mass.), American physicist and mathematician who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1977 with Philip W. Anderson and Sir Nevill F. Mott . The prize honoured Van Vleck's contributions to the understanding of the behaviour of electrons in magnetic, noncrystalline solid materials. Educated at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and at Harvard University, where he received his Ph.D. in 1922, Van Vleck joined the faculty of the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, in 1924. He taught at Wisconsin from 1928 to 1934, and he then went to Harvard, where he eventually served as chairman of the physics department (1945-49), dean of engineering and applied physics (1951-57), and Hollis professor of mathematics and natural philosophy (1951-69). Van Vleck developed during the early 1930s the first fully articulated quantum mechanical theory of magnetism. Later he was a chief architect of the ligand field theory of molecular bonding. He contributed also to studies of the spectra of free molecules, of paramagnetic relaxation, and other topics. His publications include Quantum Principles and Line Spectra (1926) and The Theory of Electric and Magnetic Susceptibilities

6. Nobel Prize Winners V-Z
van vleck, john H. 1977, physics, US, contributions to understandingthe behaviour of electrons in magnetic, noncrystalline solids,
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_v-z.html
Article Year Category Country* Achievement Literary Area Van Vleck, John H. physics U.S. contributions to understanding the behaviour of electrons in magnetic, noncrystalline solids Vane, John Robert physiology/medicine U.K. biochemistry and physiology of prostaglandins Varmus, Harold physiology/medicine U.S. study of cancer-causing genes called oncogenes Vickrey, William economics U.S. theory of incentives under conditions of asymmetric information Virtanen, Artturi Ilmari chemistry Finland invention of fodder preservation method Waals, Johannes Diederik van der physics The Netherlands research concerning the equation of state of gases and liquids Wagner-Jauregg, Julius physiology/medicine Austria work on malaria inoculation in dementia paralytica Waksman, Selman Abraham physiology/medicine U.S. discovery of streptomycin Walcott, Derek literature St. Lucia poet Wald, George physiology/medicine U.S. discoveries about chemical and physiological visual processes in the eye Walesa, Lech peace Poland Walker, John E.

7. IT - Nobel Laureates
john H. van vleck Faculty member 192428 nobel Prize in physics, 1977 van vleckshared 1977 nobel Prize in physics with Philip W. Anderson and Sir Nevill F
http://www.itdean.umn.edu/about/awards/nobel.html
Nobel Laureates
Faculty Laureates
John Bardeen
Faculty member 1938-45
Nobel Prize in physics, 1956 and 1972
Bardeen shared the 1956 prize with William B. Shockley and Walter H. Brattain (Physics Ph.D. '29) for their joint invention of the transistor. Together with Leon N. Cooper and John R. Schrieffer, he won the 1972 prize for the development of the theory of superconductivity. Arthur H. Compton
Faculty member 1916-17
Nobel Prize in physics, 1927
Compton won the Nobel Prize (along with C.T.R. Wilson of England) for his discovery and explanation of the so-called "Compton effect," the change in the wavelength of X-rays when they collide with electrons in metals. William N. Lipscomb

8. Famous Van Vlecks
My second cousin once removed, john H. van vleck, one of the during World War II,then was a professor of physics at Harvard, and won the 1977 nobel Prize in
http://www.multicians.org/thvv/famous-van-vlecks.html
Famous Van Vlecks
My second cousin once removed, John H. Van Vleck , one of the fathers of the atomic bomb, worked on radar at the MIT Radiation Laboratory during World War II, then was a professor of physics at Harvard, and won the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physics (along with Anderson and Mott, for "Electronic structure of magnetic and disordered solids"). He was at the Institute for Advanced Studies before the war, where he worked with many of the famous physicists of the time. He applied Dirac's quantum mechanics to the electric and magnetic properties of atoms, and wrote The Theory of Electric and Magnetic Susceptibilities (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1932). His theoretical work led to the formation of Los Alamos Laboratories. John H. Van Vleck wrote a festschrift paper in 1971 titled "Group theory for permutation degeneracy in four electrons, and the Pauli exclusion principle," and contributed "Travels with Dirac in the Rockies" to a biography of Dirac. He is regarded as the "Father of Modern Magnetism;" in his later work he studied chemical bonding in crystals, magnetic resonance, computer menories, and the cross correlation of digitized signals. He also won the 1966 National Medal of Science. (I met him twice. Really interesting person.)

9. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Nobel Laureates
About Sigma Xi » Overview » nobel Laureates lvar Giaever 1975 James Rainwater 1976Burton Richter 1977 Philip W. Anderson 1977 john H. van vleck 1978 Arno A
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/overview/nobel.shtml
Overview Leadership Organization News ... Contact Us About: Overview
Overview
Physics
1907 Albert Michelson
1921 Albert Einstein
1923 Robert A. Millikan
1925 James Franck
1927 Arthur H. Compton
1936 Carl D. Anderson
1937 Clinton J. Davisson 1938 Enrico Fermi 1939 Ernest O. Lawrence 1943 Otto Stern 1944 Isidor Isaac Rabi 1945 Wolfgang Pauli 1946 Percy Williams Bridgman 1952 Felix Bloch 1952 Edward M. Purcell 1955 Polykarp Kusch 1955 Willis E. Lamb, Jr. 1956 John Bardeen 1956 Walter H. Brattain 1956 William Shockley 1957 Chen Ning Yang 1958 Igor Y. Tamm 1959 Owen Chamberlain 1959 Emilio G. Segre 1960 Donald A. Glaser 1961 Robert Hofstadter 1963 Eugene P. Wigner

10. Harvard University Department Of Physics History
Harvard Faculty nobel Prizes in Physics. 1965 Julian Schwinger for fundamentalwork in quantum electrodynamics. 1977 john H. van vleck for fundamental
http://www.physics.harvard.edu/history.html
Harvard University
Department of Physics
History of the Department
The Early Years In 1642, physics was a required course in Harvard College -but the text was by Aristotle. Physics at Harvard was advanced in 1726, when Thomas Hollis of London, England, endowed a professorship in "Mathematicks and Experimental Philosophy" and also donated a shipment of scientific apparatus. In 1738 the second occupant of the Hollis chair, John Winthrop, introduced his students to Newton's Principia although, from a surviving manuscript, it is not clear whether he completely grasped Newton's Laws. Still, he made history as one of the first American observers of astronomical phenomena, such as the transits of Venus. Count Rumford (originally Benjamin Thompson of Woburn, Massachusetts), who is said to have bootlegged physics courses at Harvard when still a poor boy, became one of the discoverers of the Law of Conservation of Energy, and left the endowment for the Rumford Professorship in 1814.
Building a Laboratory
Jefferson Laboratory soon proved too small for such an expanding research agenda. In 1915 Cruft Laboratory opened and, under the direction of George W. Pierce, soon became the home of radio communication engineering. The New Research Laboratory linking Jefferson and Cruft was added in 1931. It was renamed Lyman Laboratory in 1947. While experimental research flourished, theoretical physics was not neglected. Edwin C. Kemble, a graduate student of Bridgman, was one of the first Americans to work on quantum theory. He joined the faculty in 1919, and his first graduate student was John H. Van Vleck. Later faculty colleagues Kemble, Van Vleck and Wendell H. Furry made the theoretical wing of the department unusually strong. During 1922-1935 one third of all theoretical physics Ph.D.s in the U.S. were awarded to their own students, or their students' students.

11. Nobel Physics Prize
nobel Peace Prize for Physics. 1976, Burton Richter Samuel CC Ting, USA USA. 1977,john H. van vleck Philip W. Anderson Sir Nevill F. Mott, USA USA Great Britain.
http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/nobelphysics.html
Nobel Peace Prize for Physics The Prize for Physics is the remaining of the original Prizes dating from 1901. Year Winner(s) Country W. C. Rontgen Germany H. A. Lorentz
P. Zeeman Nertherlands
Netherlands H. Becquerel
P Curie
Marie Curie France
France
France (Polish born) Lord Rayleigh (John W. Strutt) Great Britain P. Lenard Germany Joseph John Thomson Great Britain A. A. Michelson USA G. Lippmann France F. Braun
G. Marconi Germany
Italy J. D. van der Waals Netherlands W. Wien Germany G. Dalen Sweden H. Kamerlingh Onnes Netherlands M. von Laue Germany Sir William H. Bragg
Sir William L. Bragg Great Brittain
Great Britain No Award Made Charles G. Barkla Great Britain M. Planck Germany J. Stark Germany C. E. Guillaume France Albert Einstein Germany N. Bohr Denmark R. A. Millikan USA M. Siegbahn Sweden J. Franck G. Hertz Germany Germany J. Perrin

12. Dr.Tarek Said's Homepage-Nobel Prize Winners
nobel Prize in Physics Leonidovic h Penzias, Arno A. Wilson, Robert W. 1977 Anderson,Philip W. Mott, Nevill Francis, Sir van vleck, john H. 1976 Richter
http://www.geocities.com/tsaid3/nobel.html
Nobel Prize Winners Literature Peace Physics Medicine ... Nationalities
Nobel Prize in Literature
2001 Sir V.S. Naipaul
2000 Gao Xingjian
1997 Dario Fo
1996 WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA
1995 SEAMUS HEANEY
1994 KENZABURO OE
1993 TONI MORRISON
1992 DEREK WALCOTT
1991 NADINE GORDIMER 1990 OCTAVIO PAZ 1989 CAMILO JOSE CELA NAGUIB MAHFOUZ 1987 JOSEPH BRODSKY 1986 WOLE SOYINKA 1985 CLAUDE SIMON 1984 JAROSLAV SEIFERT 1983 SIR WILLIAM GOLDING 1982 GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ 1981 ELIAS CANETTI 1980 CZESLAW MILOSZ 1979 ODYSSEUS ELYTIS ( ODYSSEUS ALEPOUDHELIS ) 1978 ISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER 1977 VICENTE ALEIXANDRE 1976 SAUL BELLOW 1975 EUGENIO MONTALE 1973 PATRICK WHITE 1972 HEINRICH BALL 1971 PABLO NERUDA 1970 ALEKSANDR ISAEVICH SOLZHENITSYN 1969 SAMUEL BECKETT 1968 YASUNARI KAWABATA 1967 MIGUEL ANGEL ASTURIAS 1965 MICHAIL ALEKSANDROVICH SHOLOKHOV 1964 JEAN-PAUL SARTRE 1963 GIORGOS SEFERIS ( GIORGOS SEFERIADIS ) 1962 JOHN STEINBECK 1961 IVO ANDRIAC 1960 SAINT-JOHN PERSE ( ALEXIS LEGER ) 1959 SALVATORE QUASIMODO 1958 BORIS LEONIDOVICH PASTERNAK 1957 ALBERT CAMUS 1956 JUAN RAMON JIMENEZ 1955 HALLDER KILJAN LAXNESS 1954 ERNEST MILLER HEMINGWAY 1953 SIR WINSTON LEONARD SPENCER CHURCHILL 1951 PER FABIAN LAGERKVIST 1950 EARL BERTRAND ARTHUR WILLIAM RUSSELL 1949 WILLIAM FAULKNER 1948 THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT 1947 ANDRE PAUL GUILLAUME GIDE 1946 HERMANN HESSE 1945 GABRIELA MISTRAL ( LUCILA GODOY Y ALCA-YAGA ) 1944 JOHANNES VILHELM JENSEN 1943-1940 Main Fund and Special Fund of this prize section.

13. Nobel Prize In Physics Since 1901
CC. 1977. Anderson, Philip W.; Mott, Sir Nevill F.; vleck, john H. van. 1978.
http://www.planet101.com/nobel_physics_hist.htm
Nobel Prize in Physics since 1901 Year Winners Roentgen, Wilhelm Conrad Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon Zeeman, Pieter Becquerel, Antoine Henri; Curie, Marie; Curie, Pierre Rayleigh, Lord John William Strutt Lenard, Philipp Eduard Anton Thomson, Sir Joseph John Michelson, Albert Abraham Lippmann, Gabriel Braun, Carl Ferdinand Marconi, Guglielmo Van Der Waals, Johannes Diderik Wien, Wilhelm Dalen, Nils Gustaf Kamerlingh-Onnes, Heike Laue, Max Von Bragg, Sir William Henry; Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Barkla, Charles Glover Planck, Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Stark, Johannes Guillaume, Charles Edouard Einstein, Albert Bohr, Niels Millikan, Robert Andrews Siegbahn, Karl Manne Georg Franck, James; Hertz, Gustav Perrin, Jean Baptiste Compton, Arthur Holly; Wilson, Charles Thomson Rees Richardson, Sir Owen Willans De Broglie, Prince Louis-Victor Raman, Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Heisenberg, Werner Dirac, Paul Adrien Maurice; Schroedinger, Erwin Chadwick, Sir James

14. Premi Nobel Fisica
Translate this page 1977, PHILIP W. ANDERSON - SIR NEVILL F. MOTT - john H. van vleck. 1976, BURTONRICHTER- SAMUEL CC TING. 1975, AAGE BOHR - BEN MOTTELSON - JAMES RAINWATER.
http://www.econofisica.com/premi nobel fisica.htm
ANNO PREMIATO ZHORES I. ALFEROV - HERBERT KROEMER
JACK ST. CLAIR KILBY GERARDUS 'T HOOFT - MARTINUS J.G. VELTMAN ROBERT B. LAUGHLIN - HORST L. STORMER - DANIEL C. TSUI STEVEN CHU - CLAUDE COHEN TANNOUDJI - WILLIAM D. PHILLIPS DAVID M. LEE - DOUGLAS D. OSHEROFF - ROBERT C. RICHARDSON MARTIN L. PERL - FREDERICK REINES BERTRAM N. BROCKHOUSE - CLIFFORD G. SHULL RUSSEL A. HULSE - JOSERPH H. TAYLOR JR GEORGES CHARPAK PIERRE-GILLES DE GENNES JEROME I. FRIEDMAN - HENRY W. KENDALL - RICHARD E. TAYLOR NORMAN F. RAMSEY - HANS G. DEHMELT - WOLFGANG PAUL LEON M. LEDERMAN - MELVIN SCHWARTZ - JACK STEINBERGER J. GEORG BEDNORZ - K. ALEXANDER MULLER ERNST RUSKA - GERD BINNIG - HEINRICH ROHRER KLAUS VON KLITZING CARLO RUBBIA - SIMON VAN DER MEER SUBRAMANYAN CHANDRASEKHAR - WILLIAM A. FOWLER KENNETH G. WILSON NICOLAAS BLOEMBERGEN - ARTHUR L. SCHAWLOW - KAI M. SIEGBAHN JAMES W. CRONIN - VAL L. FITCH SHELDON L. GLASHOW - ABDUS SALAM - STEVEN WEINBERG

15. AFOSR Nobel Winners
Air Force Office of Scientific Research nobel Prize Winners Sponsored by AFOSR. 1977,1968. john H. van vleck Harvard University, Cambridge, MA. 1964.
http://www.afosr.af.mil/afrnobel.htm

Text Version of Site
Nobel Prize Winners Sponsored
by AFOSR
Name and Institution Scientific Discipline and
"Award Citation Excerpt" Year Prize Awarded Year AFOSR Support
Began Supported by AFOSR Before They Won the Prize Polykarp Kusch
Columbia University,
New York, NY Physics "precision determination of the magnetic moment of the electron" Willis Eugene Lamb Stanford University,
Stanford, CA Physics "discoveries concerning the fine structure of the hydrogen spectrum" John Bardeen University of Illinois,
Urbana, IL Physics "researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect" Willard F. Libby University of California,
Los Angeles, CA Chemistry "method to use carbon-14 for age determination in archaeology, geology, geophysics, and other branches of science" Robert Hofstadter Stanford University,
Stanford, CA Physics "pioneering studies of electron scattering in atomic nuclei and for his thereby achieved discoveries concerning the structure of the nucleons" Eugene Paul Wigner Princeton University

16. Nobel Physics Prize - Press Release 1977
of Sciences has decided to award the 1977 nobel Prize for Mott, Cambridge University,Cambridge, England and Professor john H. van vleck, Harvard University
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1977/press.html
Nobel Prize in Physics 1901-2000
http://www.nobel.se

Press Release: The 1977 Nobel Prize in Physics
KUNGL. VETENSKAPSAKADEMIEN
THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
11 October 1977
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
has decided to award the 1977 Nobel Prize for physics to be shared equally between Dr Philip W. Anderson Bell Telephone Laboratories , Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA, Professor Sir Nevill F. Mott Cambridge University , Cambridge, England and Professor John H. van Vleck Harvard University , Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, for their fundamental theoretical investigations of the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems.
The three prize-winners are theoreticians within the field of solid state physics - the branch of physics which lies behind essential parts of the current technical development, particularly in electronics. All three have added many new basic concepts to the theory, which have made it possible to understand new experimental results. The distance between fundamental results in basic research and technical applications is as a rule comparatively short in this field. As an example, one can mention that van Vleck's ideas have played a central role for the development of the laser, whereas the technical development of amorphous materials like glass, which is now going on, would be unthinkable without Mott's and Anderson's contributions to the fundamental theory.

17. The Alfred B. Nobel Prize Winners: Physics
Advertisement. nobel Prize Winners for Physics. 1977, john H. van vleck PhilipW. Anderson Nevill F. Mott, United States United States Great Britain.
http://history1900s.about.com/library/misc/blnobelphysics.htm
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Nobel Prize Winners for Physics
Chemistry Physiology or Medicine Literature Peace ... Economics Germany Hendrik A. Lorentz
Pieter Zeeman Netherlands
Netherlands Antoine Henri Becquerel Pierre Curie Marie Curie France France Poland-France John W. Strutt Great Britain Philipp E. A. von Lenard Germany Sir Joseph J. Thomson Great Britain Albert A. Michelson United States Gabriel Lippmann France Carl F. Braun Guglielmo Marconi Germany Italy Johannes D. van der Waals Netherlands Wilhelm Wien Germany Nils G. Dalen

18. NOBEL Per La FISICA
Translate this page nobel per la FISICA Solvay 1927 1901. Röentgen, Wilhelm C. (Germania).1902. Mott, Nevill F. (Gran Bretagna). van vleck, john H. (USA). 1978.
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)

19. Nobel Prizes In Physics
http//www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/. nobel PRIZE PHYSICS. YEAR. NAME OF SCIENTISTS. British.electromagnetism. 1977. john H. van vleck. American. electromagnetism. 1978.
http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/PHYS/
Nobel Prizes in Physics
Department of Chemistry, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ONTARIO M3J 1P3, CANADA For suggestions, corrections, additional information, and comments please send e-mails to jandraos@yorku.ca http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/ NOBEL PRIZE PHYSICS YEAR NAME OF SCIENTISTS NATIONALITY TYPE OF PHYSICS Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen German radiation Henrik Antoon Lorentz Dutch magnetism, radiation Pieter Zeeman Dutch magnetism, radiation Pierre Curie French radiation Marie Curie French radiation Antoine Henri Becquerel French radiation Lord John William Strutt Rayleigh British gases Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard Hungarian-German cathode rays Sir Joseph John Thomson British gases Albert Abraham Michelson German-American spectroscopy Gabriel Lippmann French optics Guglielmo Marconi Italian telegraphy Carl Ferdinand Braun German telegraphy Johannes Diderik van der Waals Dutch gases Wilhelm Wien German radiation Nils Gustaf Dalen Swedish gases Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes Dutch cryogenics Max von Laue German crystallography Sir William Henry Bragg British crystallography Sir William Lawrence Bragg British crystallography no prize awarded Charles Glover Barkla British radiation Max Planck German quantum theory, radiation

20. Nobel Prize For Physics
nobel Prize for Physics. Samuel CC Ting (both US), for discovery of subatomic particlesknown as J and psi 1977 Philip W. Anderson, john H. van vleck (both US
http://www.factmonster.com/ipa/A0105785.html

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Nobel Prize for Physics
For years not listed, no award was made.
Wilhelm K. Roentgen (Germany), for discovery of Roentgen rays Hendrik A. Lorentz and Pieter Zeeman (Netherlands), for work on influence of magnetism upon radiation A. Henri Becquerel (France), for work on spontaneous radioactivity; and Pierre and Marie Curie (France), for study of radiation John Strutt (Lord Rayleigh) (U.K.), for discovery of argon in investigating gas density Philipp Lenard (Germany), for work with cathode rays Sir Joseph Thomson (U.K.), for investigations on passage of electricity through gases

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