University Of Chicago News: Nobel Laureates nobel Prize in Physics 1980 with val L. fitch. For the discovery of violationsof fundamental symmetry principles in the decay of neutral Kmesons. http://www-news.uchicago.edu/resources/alumni/nobel-alumni.html
Extractions: S.B., 1932; S.M., 1934; Ph.D., 1936; D.Sc. (honorary), 1967 Nobel Prize in Physics 1968 For his decisive contributions to elementary particle physics, in particular the discovery of a large number of resonance states, made possible through his development of the technique of using hydrogen bubble chamber and data analysis Gary S. Becker
NOBEL Per La FISICA Translate this page nobel per la FISICA Solvay 1927 1901. Röentgen, Wilhelm C. (Germania). 1902. 1980.Cronin, James W. (USA). fitch, val L. (USA). 1981. Bloembergen, Nicolaas (USA). http://digilander.libero.it/andreawentura/fisica/nobel.htm
Extractions: 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)
Physics & Astronomy Brochure of Chicago (1987) (Ph.D. Johns Hopkins 1937). val L. fitch, Princeton Univ.(1988), nobel laureate in physics, 1980. Melvin Schwartz, Stanford Univ. http://www.pha.jhu.edu/brochure/lect.html
Extractions: These lectures were established in 1981 and are funded by an endowment provided by one of our alumni, Professor Ferdinand G. Brickwedde (B.A. '22, M.A. '24, Ph.D. '25), and his wife, Langhorne Howard Brickwedde. Professor Brickwedde has had a distinguished research and academic career. He was a co-discoverer of deuterium, a heavy isotope of hydrogen. He was long associated with the National Bureau of Standards and was dean of the College of Chemistry and Physics at Pennsylvania State University from 1956 to 1963. Each academic year, at least one outstanding individual is invited for a three-day period. During this time, the visitor delivers a public address and the weekly departmental colloquium, the latter being geared to the scientific community. At other times, visitors are invited for shorter or longer periods to give a colloquium, teach and/or conduct specialized seminars. As stipulated by the Brickweddes, the visitors are asked to spend generous amounts of time with students. Informal discussions and social activities are arranged so that all students have the opportunity to have close contact with our guests. The list of Brickwedde lecturers, with the year of their visit, is given below: E.M. Purcell, Harvard Univ. (1981), Nobel laureate in physics, 1952.
Guptill Lecturers in a New Light . October 28, 1982, Professor val L. fitch (nobel Laureate), Matter Antimatter Asymmetry . October 15, 1981, Professor http://www.physics.dal.ca/GuptillLecture.html
Extractions: ( 2001 Guptill Memorial Lecture ) Prof. Carlo Montemagno , UCLA "Convergence: Integrating Modern Biology with Modern Engineering and Physics" October 11, 2000 Prof. Steven Chu (Nobel Laureate in 1997) "Superfluidity in Helium Three: The Discovery through the eyes of a Graduate Student" September 14, 1999 Prof. Douglas Osheroff (Nobel Laureate) "Superfluidity in Helium Three: The Discovery through the eyes of a Graduate Student" September 21, 1998
Extractions: Home About Us Contact Us Subscribe ... Sports Tuesday, March 11, 2003 SCIENCE Nobel laureates oppose war against Iraq By Belle Dumé Forty-one American Nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war with Iraq. The declaration was organized by Walter Kohn, a theoretical physicist at the University of California at Santa Barbara, and former adviser to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon. The signatories include 19 winners of the physics prize. The declaration reads: The undersigned oppose a preventive war against Iraq without broad international support. Military operations against Iraq may indeed lead to a relatively swift victory in the short term. But war is characterized by surprise, human loss and unintended consequences. Even with a victory, we believe that the medical, economic, environmental, moral, spiritual, political and legal consequences of an American preventive attack on Iraq would undermine, not protect, US security and standing in the world. The signatories include Norman Ramsey, who worked on the Manhattan Project, and Charles Townes, a former research director of the Institute for Defense Analyses at the Pentagon. Townes was also chairman of a federal panel that studied nuclear warheads.
Nobel.txt on the occasion of the onehundredth anniversary of the nobel Prize. 1973) 30.EdmondH. Fischer (Physiology/Medicine, 1992) 31.val L. fitch (Physics, 1980) 32 http://faculty.kutztown.edu/bendinsk/nobel.html
COMPREHENSIVE TEST BAN TREATY EVENT Hans Dehmelt UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON 1989 nobel Prize. val L. fitch PRINCETONUNIVERSITY 1980 nobel Prize. Jerome Friedman MIT 1990 nobel Prize. http://www.ostp.gov/html/9910_7_2.html
Extractions: To Senators of the 106th Congress: We urge you to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. The United States signed and ratified the Limited Test Ban Treaty in 1963. In the years since, the nation has played a leadership role in actions to reduce nuclear risks, including the Non-Proliferation Treaty extension, the ABM Treaty, STARTs I and II, and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty negotiations. Fully informed technical studies have concluded that continued nuclear testing is not required to retain confidence in the safety, reliability and performance of nuclear weapons in the United States stockpile, provided science and technology programs necessary for stockpile stewardship are maintained. The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty is central to future efforts to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. Ratification of the Treaty will mark an important advance in uniting the world in an effort to contain and reduce the dangers of nuclear arms. It is imperative that the CTBT be ratified.
Ëàóðåàòû Íîáåëåâñêèõ ïðåìèé ïî ôèçèêå Alphabetical listing of nobel prize laureates in Physics. Name. Year Awarded. Feynman,Richard P. 1965. fitch, val L. 1980. Fowler, William A. 1983. http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_ph.htm
Extractions: PHYSICS Alphabetical listing of Nobel prize laureates in Physics Name Year Awarded Alfven, Hannes Alvarez, Luis W. Anderson, Carl David Anderson, Philip W. Appleton, Sir Edward Victor Bardeen, John Bardeen, John Barkla, Charles Glover Basov, Nicolay Gennadiyevich Becquerel, Antoine Henri Bednorz, J. Georg Bethe, Hans Albrecht Binnig, Gerd Blackett, Lord Patrick Maynard Stuart Bloch, Felix Bloembergen, Nicolaas Bohr, Aage Bohr, Niels Born, Max Bothe, Walther Bragg, Sir William Henry Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Brattain, Walter Houser Braun, Carl Ferdinand Bridgman, Percy Williams Brockhouse, Bertram N. Chadwick, Sir James Chamberlain, Owen Chandrasekhar, Subramanyan Charpak, Georges Cherenkov, Pavel Alekseyevich Chu, Steven Cockcroft, Sir John Douglas Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude Compton, Arthur Holly Cooper, Leon N. Curie, Marie Curie, Pierre Dalen, Nils Gustaf Davisson, Clinton Joseph De Broglie, Prince Louis-Victor De Gennes, Pierre-Gilles Dehmelt, Hans G.
Nobel Prize For Physics nobel Prize for Physics. which causes radioactive decay in some atomic nuclei, arefacets of the same phenomenon 1980 James W. Cronin and val L. fitch (both US http://www.factmonster.com/ipa/A0105785.html
Extractions: 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
Yorkshire CND - Nobel Winners Urge Halt To Missile Plan - 6/7/00 OF WASHINGTON 1992 nobel Prize in medicine. val L. fitch PRINCETON UNIVERSITY1980 nobel Prize in physics. Robert F. Furchgott SUNY HEALTH SCIENCE CTR. http://www.gn.apc.org/cndyorks/yspace/articles/bmd152.htm
Extractions: By WILLIAM J. BROAD, New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/global/070600missile-nobel.html A group of 50 Nobel laureates has signed an open letter to President Clinton urging him to reject a proposed $60 billion missile defense system. The group said the plan would be wasteful and dangerous. "The system would offer little protection and would do grave harm to this nation's core security interests," the laureates wrote before the system's ground-based interceptor is tested on Friday. All the signers are American citizens or have worked much of their lives in the United States. The letter, to be sent today to the White House, was organized by the Federation of American Scientists, a group in Washington that opposes the missile plan. Although laureates occasionally band together in informal groups to address issues, it is unusual for so many to do so. Federation officials said the assembly might be the largest ever. Hans A. Bethe, a Nobel winner in physics who was a main architect of the atom bomb, helped write the letter and was the first to sign. The others include 21 who won in physics, 11 in chemistry, 14 in biology or medicine and 4 in economics, representing about half of all living American science Nobel winners. The one-page letter said scientists independent of the Pentagon have long argued that foes could outwit or overwhelm any such attempt at defense. The letter also noted that North Korea, whose missile program is a main reason that the Pentagon wants to build its system, had recently taken steps toward reconciliation with South Korea. "Other dangerous states will arise," the letter said. "But what would such a state gain by attacking the United States except its own destruction?"
Extractions: On the 100th Anniversary of the Nobel Prize. Dateline Stockholm; December 11, 2001. The attached Statement was released as 150 Nobel Laureates gathered in Stockholm, Sweden, and Oslo, Norway, for an unprecedented celebration marking the 100th Anniversary of the Nobel Prize. (The prize winners in Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature and Economics meet in Stockholm where their prizes were awarded, and, correspondingly, the Peace Prize winners meet in Oslo.) In brief, the Statement warns that the world may explode into war if modern weapons continue to spread, and environmental strains remain unchecked. It stresses that we shall not have enduring peace until we address the twin scourges of poverty and oppression, and calls for a new sense of global responsibility. It hardly need be said that the signatories make no claim to oracular status, but offer their views as a group of concerned citizens.
Nobel Laureates the 100th anniversary of the nobel prize, 100 nobel laureates have Physics, 1973Edmond H. Fischer, Physiology/Medicine, 1992 val L. fitch, Physics, 1980 http://www.onlinecreativeconcepts.com/nobellaureates.html
Extractions: OSLO, Norway (OTVNewswire) At the Nobel Peace Prize Centennial Symposium here yesterday celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Nobel prize, 100 Nobel laureates have issued a brief but dire warning of the "profound dangers" facing the world. Their statement predicts that our security depends on immediate environmental and social reform. The following is the text of their statement: THE STATEMENT The most profound danger to world peace in the coming years will stem not from the irrational acts of states or individuals but from the legitimate demands of the world's dispossessed. Of these poor and disenfranchised, the majority live a marginal existence in equatorial climates. Global warming, not of their making but originating with the wealthy few, will affect their fragile ecologies most. Their situation will be desperate and manifestly unjust. It cannot be expected, therefore, that in all cases they will be content to await the beneficence of the rich. If then we permit the devastating power of modern weaponry to spread through this combustible human landscape, we invite a conflagration that can engulf both rich and poor. The only hope for the future lies in co-operative international action, legitimized by democracy. It is time to turn our backs on the unilateral search for security, in which we seek to shelter behind walls. Instead, we must persist in the quest for united action to counter both global warming and a weaponized world. These twin goals will constitute vital components of stability as we move toward the wider degree of social justice that alone gives hope of peace.
James Watson Cronin - CIRS Corecipient with val Logsdon fitch of the 1980 nobel Prize for Physics for an experimentthat Research Corporation Award (with val L. fitch), 1968 John Price http://www.cirs.net/researchers/physics/cronin.htm
Extractions: jwc@uchep.uchicago.edu University Professor of Physics Emeritus, University of Chicago Corecipient with Val Logsdon Fitch of the 1980 Nobel Prize for Physics for an experiment that implied that reversing the direction of time would not precisely reverse the course of certain reactions of subatomic particles. Research Corporation Award (with Val L. Fitch), 1968 John Price Wetherill Medal of the Franklin institute (with Val L. Fitch), 1975 Ernest 0. Lawence Award, 1977 Member of the American Philosophical Society Contribution : in a series of experiments conducted at Brookhaven in 1964, Cronin and his colleague Fitch showed that in rare instances subatomic particles called K mesons violate CP symmetry during their decay. Important contribution to the understanding of the principles of symmetry governing elementary particles.
Soci Istituto Veneto Wetherill Medal of the Franklin Institute (with val L. fitch), 1975 Ernest O. LawrenceAward, 1977 nobel Prize in Physics (with val L. fitch) 1980 Laureate of http://www.istitutoveneto.it/ivinglese/presentazione/soci/soci_trova.php?ID=178
The Alfred B. Nobel Prize Winners: Physics Advertisement. nobel Prize Winners for Physics. Pakistan. 1980, JamesW. Cronin val L. fitch, United States United States. 1981, http://history1900s.about.com/library/misc/blnobelphysics.htm
Appel Des Prix Nobels Translate this page Le scientifique e spère que la majorité des quelque cent vingt prix nobel américainsde sciences et d'économie encore (Ch), (*) val L. fitch (Ph), Robert http://rifondazione75.samizdat.net/documents/Nobels_irak.htm
Extractions: " Des opérations militaires contre l'Irak pourraient certes conduire à une victoire relativement rapide, à court terme. Mais la guerre se caractérise par la surprise, les pertes humaines et les conséquences involontaires. Même en cas de victoire, nous croyons que les conséquences médicales, économiques, environnementales, morales, spirituelles, politiques et juridiques d'une attaque préventive contre l'Irak ne protégeraient pas mais nuiraient à la sécurité des Etats-Unis et à leur rang dans le monde. " spère que la majorité des quelque cent vingt prix Nobel américains de sciences et d'économie encore en vie se joindront à cet appel. L'appel diffusé sur Internet est suivi d'une " proposition d'adhésion à tous ceux qui se retrouvent dans cette position. " http://www.nobellaureatesoniraq.org.
Michigan Tech News, Nobel Prize Winner To Speak At MTU In 1980 he and colleague val L. fitch received the nobel Prize for their discoveryof charge conjugation/parity violation, the asymmetry in the behavior of http://www.admin.mtu.edu/urel/breaking/1999/cronin.htm
Extractions: HOUGHTONDr. James W. Cronin, professor of physics at the University of Chicago's Enrico Fermi Institute and winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize for Physics, will speak at Michigan Tech Sept. 16 as part of the University's Melvin Calvin Nobel Laureate Series. Dr. Cronin will participate in a tree planting ceremony in his honor at 2:00 p.m. on the campus mall adjacent to the Minerals and Materials Building. His public lecture, "Eighty-five Years of Cosmic Ray Research: A Human and Scientific Drama," will take place at 4:00 p.m. in room U115 of the Minerals and Materials Building. Cronin received a Ph.D in physics from the University of Chicago in 1955. He served as assistant physicist at Brookhaven National Laboratory from 1955 until 1958, when he accepted an appointment as assistant professor of physics at Princeton University. In 1971 he returned to the University of Chicago as professor of physics. In 1980 he and colleague Val L. Fitch received the Nobel Prize for their discovery of charge conjugation/parity violation, the asymmetry in the behavior of matter and antimatter. Cronin is a member of the National Academy of Science, the American Academy of Arts and Science, and is a fellow of the American Physical Society. He is a project co-leader, along with Dr. Alan A. Watson of the University of Leeds (United Kingdom) of the 19-nation Pierre Auger Project to study very-high-energy cosmic rays. The Auger Project consortium began construction earlier this year on a cosmic ray observatory in Argentina that will consist of 1,600 particle detector stations arranged in a giant grid covering 3,000 square kilometers, an area about 10 times the size of the city of Paris. The detector array will record the arrival on earth of air "showers" caused by the most powerful particle interactions ever observed, in an attempt to track down the unknown origin of these extremely high-energy cosmic rays. Dr. David Nitz of Michigan Tech is a member of the Pierre Auger team.
Harapan's Bookshelf: Nobel Prize In Physics nobel Prize in Physics last updated on 02/02/25. Link Official Website of nobelFoundation Physics Physics 1980. JAMES W. CRONIN and val L. fitch for the http://www.harapan.co.jp/english/e_books/E_B_nobel_phy_e.htm
Extractions: Japanese Amazon.com customer service Amazon.com Shipping Information Are you in Japan? Are you interested in Japan? English Books in Japan Books in Japanese Nobel Prize in Physics last updated on Link: Official Website of Nobel Foundation: Physics Physics 1998 Robert B. Laughlin and Daniel C. Tsui for their discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations. Physics 1997 STEVEN CHU, CLAUDE COHEN-TANNOUDJI and WILLIAM D. PHILLIPS for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light. Physics 1996 DAVID M. LEE DOUGLAS D. OSHEROFF and ROBERT C. RICHARDSON for their discovery of superfluidity in helium-3. Physics 1995 MARTIN L. PERL for the discovery of the tau lepton FREDERICK REINES for the detection of the neutrino. Physics 1994 BERTRAM N. BROCKHOUSE for the development of neutron spectroscopy ; CLIFFORD G. SHULL
Nobel nobel Prize Winners Who Oppose Prohibition. Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Peace, 1980 NicolausBloembergen, Physics, 1981. val L. fitch, Physics, 1980. http://www.repeal.net/Nobel.htm
Extractions: Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Peace, 1980 Ilya Prigogine, Chemistry, 1977 John C. Polanyi, Chemistry, 1986 Oscar Arias, Peace, 1987 Dario Fo, Literature, 1997 Nicolaus Bloembergen, Physics, 1981 Val L. Fitch, Physics, 1980 Joshua Lederberg, Medicine, 1958 Robert E. Lucas, Jr., Economics, 1995 Martin L. Perl, Physics, 1995 Richard E. Smalley, Chemistry, 1996 Milton Friedman, Economics, 1976 Henry Kendall, Physics, 1990 Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Literature, Kerry Mullis, Chemistry Ferid Murad, M.D., Medicine