Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Physics brought to you by. The nobel Prize Internet Archive 1997 The prize was awardedjointly to and the other half to. brian D. josephson for his http://www.isan.troitsk.ru/INC/Nobel/Winners.htm
Physics Today July 2001 point, however, is that vanishing D does not josephson's nobel Prize in Physics wasawarded in 1973 Ivar Giaever, Walter Harrison, brian josephson, Leo Kadanoff http://www.physicstoday.com/pt/vol-54/iss-7/p46.html
Extractions: Back to Table of Contents July Articles: Time-Resolved Macromolecular Crystallography Diffusion on Semiconductor Surfaces The Nobel Laureate Versus the Graduate Student References Site Index Physics Today Home Page Current Issue Past Contents Job Ads Upcoming Meetings Buyer's Guide About Physics Today Contact Us Advertising Information Print Ad Rates and Specs Online Ad Rates and Specs Advertiser Index Product Information Information Exchange The Nobel Laureate Versus the Graduate Student John Bardeen, the leading condensed matter theorist of his day, was quite wrong when he dismissed a startling prediction by the unknown Brian Josephson. Donald G. McDonald In 1962, Brian Josephson, a 22-year-old research student at Cambridge University, suggested a new and surprising effect. A supercurrent, he argued, can tunnel through a thin insulating barrier. University of Illinois theorist John Bardeen disagreed, and that mattered. At age 54, Bardeen was the most celebrated solid-state theorist of his time. He had shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics with William Shockley and Walter Brattain for the invention of the transistor. He would share a second Nobel prize in 1972 with Leon Cooper and Robert Schrieffer for their 1957 solution (the BCS theory) of the long-standing riddle of superconductivity. Bardeen publicly dismissed young Josephson's tunneling-supercurrent assertion in a "Note added in proof" to a 1962 article in
D. Dutch Accuses of Dr. brian josephson, professor at Cambridge University and winner of the 1973Nobel prize in physics. This box is a brief explanation of Prof. D. Dutch's http://www.ar-tiste.com/qcomp_onion/jan2002/DDutchAccuses.htm
Extractions: BEDLAM, UKRecently, Dr. Double Dutch (more about him here ), professor at Oxford University, expressed much dissatisfaction with the teachings of Dr. Brian Josephson , professor at Cambridge University and winner of the 1973 Nobel prize in physics. This box is a brief explanation of Prof. D. Dutch's Multiverse Theory of Quantum Mechanics. The writer of this article doesn't claim to understand the theory, but, probably, the reader won't be able to tell the difference. We tried really hard to understand the "Fabric of Reality", but were making no headway, so we decided, hey, what we need are some examples. That's when we set out to find some examples of the Multiverse in D. Dutch's writings, and we came up with some intriguing ones: In the universe familiar to us, Jozsa and Dutch collaborated to invent a quantum algorithm for deciding whether a function is balanced or unbalanced(crazy). As with all famous quantum algorithms, this one is of much practical value. The surprising thing is that in an alternate universe, D. Dutch invented the algorithm all alone
Nobel Physics Prize nobel Peace Prize for Physics. The USA. 1973, Ivan Giaever Leo Esak BrianD. josephson, USA (Norwegian born) Japan Great Britain. 1974, http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/nobelphysics.html
Premi Nobel Fisica Translate this page 1974, SIR MARTIN RYLE - ANTONY HEWISH. 1973, LEO ESAKI - IVAR GIAEVER - BRIAND. josephson. 1972, JOHN BARDEEN - LEON N. COOPER - J. ROBERT SCHRIEFFER. http://www.econofisica.com/premi nobel fisica.htm
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JOSEPHSON, Prof brian David, FRS 1970; Professor of Physics, Cambridge University of Abraham josephsonand Mimi josephson; married 1976 Honorary D.Sc. Wales, 1974; Exeter, 1984 http://www.uri-geller.com/bj.htm
Extractions: JOSEPHSON, Prof. Brian David, FRS 1970; Professor of Physics, Cambridge University, since 1974; Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, since 1962; born 4 Jan. 1940; son of Abraham Josephson and Mimi Josephson; married 1976, Carol Anne Olivier; one daughter Education: Cardin High School; Cambridge University BA 1960, MA, Ph.D. 1964, Cantab. FInstP. Assistant Director of Research in Physics, 1967-72, Reader in Physics, 1972-74, University of Cambridge. Res. Assistant Prof., Illinois University, 1965-66; Visiting, Fellow, Cornell University, 1971; Visiting Faculty Member, Maharishi European Res. University, 1975; Visiting Professor: Wayne State University, 1983; Indian Inst. of Science, Bangalore, 1984. Honorary MIEEE, 1982; For. Honorary Member, American Academy Of Arts and Sciences, 1974. Honorary D.Sc.: Wales, 1974; Exeter, 1984. Awards: New Scientist, 1969; Research Corp., 1969; Fritz London, 1970; Nobel Prize for Physics, 1973. Medals: Guthrie, 1972; van der Pol, 1972; Elliott Cresson, 1972; Hughes, 1972; Holweck, 1973; Faraday, 1982; Sir George Thomson, 1984. Publications: Consciousness and the Physical World, 1980 (edited jointly); research papers on physics and theory of intelligence, the convergence of science and religion.
Extractions: NEWS RELEASE #14608, 7/31/97 by Robert Sanders Berkeley In a dramatic confirmation of predictions made more than 30 years ago, UC Berkeley physicists have detected quantum vibrations in this case a high-pitched whistle in a superfluid analogous to the Josephson effect in superconductors. The confirmation of this fundamental prediction of quantum mechanics the theory that describes interactions on the atomic scale culminates more than 10 years of effort by a University of California at Berkeley team led by low temperature physicists James C. "Seamus" Davis and Richard E. Packard. Over the past three decades numerous laboratories around the world have searched for the effect, but no conclusive evidence for it had been found. "This has been a Holy Grail of physics," says Packard, a professor of physics. "The discovery is fundamental to our understanding of superfluids and by analogy of the phenomena we observe in superconductors." The UC Berkeley team, which includes post-doctoral scientist Sergey Pereversev and graduate students Scott Backhaus and Alex Loshak, report their results in the July 31 issue of the British journal Nature.
Information Please: 1973 Science. nobel Prizes in Science Physics Ivar Giaever (US), Leo Esaki (Japan), andBrian D. josephson (UK), for theories that have advanced and expanded the http://www.factmonster.com/year/1973.html
The Nobel Prize The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set. http://home.megapass.co.kr/~jayleen/physics/psy-index.htm