ÈËÎï½±Ïî osheroff, douglas D. (1945 ) (3). Penzias, Arno - 1978 nobel prizewinner in radioastronomy and long time Bell Labs chief scientist, futurist, and venture http://www.lib.szu.edu.cn/szulibhtm/AD_xkzt/BD_wl/renwjx.htm
Nobel Prizes Awarded For Chemistry And Physics The nobel Prize in physics, which, like the prize in chemistry, is worth Robert C.Richardson, 59, of Cornell University and Dr. douglas D. osheroff, 52, of http://anthrax.physics.indiana.edu/~dzierba/Honors/Week6/NYT.html
Extractions: October 10, 1996 By MALCOLM W. BROWNE Six scientists, five of them Americans, shared two Nobel Prizes Wednesday, one of them for founding an important branch of chemistry based on molecules shaped like soccer balls, and the other for discovering intriguing connections between the physics of the ultra-small and the ultra-large. The Nobel Prize in chemistry was won by Dr. Richard E. Smalley, 53, and Dr. Robert F. Curl Jr., 63, of Rice University in Houston and Sir Harold W. Kroto, 57, of the University of Sussex, England. They were honored for their discovery of a previously unknown class of carbon molecule, in which 60 carbon atoms are linked in the form of a soccer ball. These and similar molecules were dubbed "fullerenes" or "buckyballs" after the discovery in 1985 because their geodesic molecular structures are suggestive of the architectural domes designed by Buckminster Fuller. Since then, chemists have synthesized some 5,000 variants of the buckyball, including elongated spheroids, sheets of carbon and microscopic tubes. The Nobel Prize in physics, which, like the prize in chemistry, is worth $1.12 million, was awarded to Dr. David M. Lee, 65, and Dr. Robert C. Richardson, 59, of Cornell University and Dr. Douglas D. Osheroff, 52, of Stanford University. At the time of their 1972 discovery of a phenomenon called superfluidity in a rare form of helium, helium-3, Osheroff was a graduate student at Cornell.
Nobelova Cena Za Fyziku Russell Alan Hulse, 1994 Bertram N. Brockhouse, Clifford G. Schull, 1995 FrederickReines, Martin L. Perl, 1996 David M. Lee, douglas D. osheroff a Robert C http://www.converter.cz/nobel.htm
Extractions: Domovská stránka Nobelova cena Nobelova cena za fyziku a její laureáti. U nìkterých fyzikù je dostupný jejich ivotopis. Dostupné je také za co Nobelovu cenu fyzici získali Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen Hendrik Antoon Lorentz Pieter Zeeman ... Philipp Eduard Anton von Lenard , 1906 Sir Joseph John Thomson, 1907 Albert Abraham Michelson , 1908 Gabriel Lippmann, 1909 Guglielmo Marchese Marconi, Carl Ferdinand Braun Johannes Diderik van der Waals Wilhelm Carl Werner Wien , 1912 Nils Gustaff Dalén, 1913 Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes, 1914 Max Theodor Felix von Laue, 1915 Sir William Henry Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Bragg, 1916 penìní cena byla vloena do zvlátního fondu, 1917 Charles Glover Barkla, 1918 Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck , 1919 Johannes Stark Charles Edouard Guillaume, 1921 Albert Einstein Niels Bohr , 1923 Robert Andrews Millikan, 1924 Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn , 1925 James Franck, Gustav Hertz , 1926 Jean Baptiste Perrin, 1927 Arthur Holly Compton, Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 1928 Sir Owen Williams Richardson, 1929 Louis Victor de Broglie Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman, 1931 penìní cena byla vloena do zvlátního fondu, 1932
Géniesenherbe.org - Prix Nobel De Physique Translate this page Le prix nobel de physique est attribué par l'Académie royale des sciences de Suède,à 1996, David M. Lee (États-Unis), douglas D. osheroff (États-Unis http://www.geniesenherbe.org/theorie/prix/nobphys.html
Extractions: Lauréats du prix Nobel de physique Le prix Nobel de physique est attribué par l'Académie royale des sciences de Suède, à Stockholm. Année Récipiendaire Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (Allemagne) Hendrik Antoon Lorentz (Pays-Bas) et Pieter Zeeman (Pays-Bas) Antoine Henri Becquerel (France), Pierre Curie (France) et Marie Curie (France) John William Strutt, 3 e baron Rayleigh (Grande-Bretagne) Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard (Allemagne) sir Joseph John Thomson (Grande-Bretagne) Albert Abraham Michelson (États-Unis) Gabriel Lippmann (France) Guglielmo Marconi (Italie) et Karl Ferdinand Braun (Allemagne) Johannes Diderik van der Waals (Pays-Bas) Wilhelm Wien (Allemagne) Nils Gustaf Dalén (Suède) Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (Pays-Bas) Max von Laue (Allemagne) sir William Henry Bragg (Grande-Bretagne) et sir William Lawrence Bragg (Grande-Bretagne) NON ATTRIBUÉ Charles Glover Barkla (Grande-Bretagne) Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck (Allemagne) Johannes Stark (Allemagne) Charles Édouard Guillaume (Suisse) Albert Einstein (Allemagne et Suisse) Niels Bohr (Danemark) Robert Andrews Millikan (États-Unis) Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn (Suède) James Franck (Allemagne) et Gustav Hertz (Allemagne) Jean Baptiste Perrin (France) Arthur Holly Compton (États-Unis) et Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (Grande-Bretagne) sir Owen Williams Richardson (Grande-Bretagne) prince Louis Victor de Broglie (France) sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman (Inde) NON ATTRIBUÉ Werner Heisenberg (Allemagne) Erwin Schrodinger (Autriche) et Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac (Grande Bretagne) NON ATTRIBUÉ sir James Chadwick (Grande-Bretagne)
Dr.Tarek Said's Homepage-Nobel Prize Winners nobel Prize in Physics DANIEL C. TSUI 1997 Steven Chu, Claude CohenTannoudji, William D. Phillips 1996 Lee, David M. osheroff, douglas D. Richardson http://www.geocities.com/tsaid3/nobel.html
AldeaEducativa.com | Contenidos Y Consultas Educativas Translate this page Venezolanos Ilustres. Premios nobel de 1996. Mirrlees, James A. Helio-3. Universidadde Cornell. Ithaca, NY, Estados Unidos. osheroff, douglas D. http://www.aldeaeducativa.com/aldea/Nobel1e.asp?Which=1996
Extractions: June 26, 2001 EXTRA Read about it! On the Agenda... Breakfast Vis-à-vis Hotel Daily info session Prof. Klaus von Klitzing (Stuggart/D) presentation: "Electronic Properties of Heterostructures" Prof. Herbert Kroemer (Santa Barbara/USA) presentation: "Heterostructures for Everything?" Prof. Zhores Alferov (St. Petersburg/RUS) presentation: Heterostructures: State of the Art and Future Trends" Prof. Leo Esaki (Tokyo/ Japan) presentation: "Modern Alchemy: Engineered Quantum Structures" Prof. Jack Steinberger (Genf/CH) presentation: "Cosmic Background Radiation" Goldenes Lamm Dinner with Laureates On the evening of June 26, DOE/ORAU sponsored a dinner for the U.S. students and approximately half of the laureates. This allowed the group to have some "quality" time with the laureates away from the crowds at the Inselhalle. Tomorrow, DOE/ORAU will sponsor a similar luncheon for the remaining laureates, giving everyone in the group the opportunity to meet and talk with all of the laureates attending the 2001 meeting.
Jewish Nobel Prize Winners 1996- douglas D. osheroff; 1996 - David M. Lee; 1997- Claude Cohen-Tannoudji; http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Judaism/nobels.html
Extractions: Jewish Nobel Prize Winners The Nobel Prizes are awarded by the Nobel Foundation of Sweden to men and women who have rendered the greatest service to humankind. Between 1901 and 1995, 663 Nobel Prizes were handed out. Of these, 140 are Jews or people of Jewish descent. 1905 - Adolph Von Baeyer 1906 - Henri Moissan 1910 - Otto Wallach 1915 - Richard Willstaetter 1918 - Fritz Haber 1943 - George Charles de Hevesy 1961 - Melvin Calvin 1962 - Max Ferdinand Perutz 1972 - William Howard Stein Ilya Prigogine 1979 - Herbert Charles Brown 1980 - Paul Berg Walter Gilbert 1981 - Roald Hoffmann 1982 - Aaron Klug 1985 - Albert A. Hauptman
Stanford University Department Of Physics - Faculty: Douglas D. Osheroff douglas D. osheroff. osheroff@leland.stanford.edu. Group Page. BS, 1967, Caltech; Ph.D.,1973, Cornell; Member of technical staff of AT T Bell Laboratories, 197287; http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/people/faculty/osheroff_douglas.html
Extractions: fax 650-725-6544 osheroff@leland.stanford.edu Group Page Specialty: ultra-low temperature physics B.S., 1967, Caltech Ph.D., 1973, Cornell Head Solid State and Low Temperature Research Department 1981-87 Professor of Physics and Applied Physics 1987-present J. G. Jackson and C. J. Wood Professor of Physics Fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member of the National Academy of Sciences Simon Memorial Prize 1976 Oliver E. Buckley Prize, 1981
Osheroff, Douglas D. osheroff, douglas D. Venky Narayanamurti, who had recently received his Ph.D. in physicsat course, one student wrote in his course evaluation osheroff is a http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/O/Osheroff/Osher
Extractions: Osheroff, Douglas D. Ethnically, I come from a mixed family. My father was the son of Jewish immigrants who left Russia shortly after the turn of the century, and my mother was the daughter of a Lutheran minister whose parents were from what is now Slovakia. Mostly, however, I grew up in a medical family. My father's father and all his children either became physicians or married them. My parents had met in New York where my father was a medical intern and my mother was a nurse. At the end of World War II, my parents settled in Aberdeen, a small logging town on the west coast of Washington State, where medical doctors were in short supply. Surrounded by natural beauty, it was a perfect place to raise a family, and I was the second of five children. To this day I grow pale at the sight of blood, and never for a moment considered a career in medicine. Despite this, my father, who was usually engrossed in his medical career, inspired in me passions for both photography and gardening, which were his hobbies when time permitted, as they are mine. Natural science interested me intensely from a very early age. When I was six I began tearing my toys apart to play with the electric motors. From then on, my free hours were occupied by a myriad of mechanical, chemical and electrical projects, culminating in the construction of a 100 keV X-ray machine during my senior year in high school.
FLORIDA TODAY: Columbia Accident Investigation Board douglas D. osheroff Dr. douglas D. osheroff was awarded the 1996 NobelPrize in Physics. He shares the prize with two colleagues http://www.flatoday.com/columbia/mishapboard/osheroff.htm
Extractions: /* You may give each page an identifying name, server, and channel on the next lines. */ var pageName="" var server="" var channel="" var pageType="" var pageValue="" var prop1="" var prop2="columbia" var prop3="" var prop4="" var prop5="space" var prop6="news" var prop7="local_news" var prop8="" var prop9="" var prop10="" /********* INSERT THE DOMAIN AND PATH TO YOUR CODE BELOW ************/ /********** DO NOT ALTER ANYTHING ELSE BELOW THIS LINE! *************/ var s_code=' ' Douglas D. Osheroff Dr. Osheroff received his BS from California Tech and Ph.D. from Cornell. He is the G. Jackson and C.J. Wood Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University. Dr. Osheroff was a member of the technical staff at the Department of Solid State and Low Temperature Research at Bell Laboratories in the 1970s. As a graduate student at Cornell before that, Osheroff and his thesis advisors, David M. Lee and Robert C. Richardson, discovered the first of three superfluid phases of liquid helium-3, at a temperature only about two-thousandths of a degree above absolute zero. Osheroff is a leader in the study of superfluidity and of the properties of thin superconducting films. He served as Chairman of the Physics Department from 1993 until August 1996. The Nobel Prize caps a long list of awards Osheroff has received. A member of the National Academy of Sciences, he has won the Simon Memorial Prize, the Oliver Buckley Prize, and was named a MacArthur Fellow. Osheroff also won a Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching.
The Star Archive - Douglas D. Osheroff Listing last updated on November 28th, 2002, AD douglas D. osheroff. (nobelphysics laureate 1996). 75 Ranch Rd. Redwood City, CA. 940624809 USA. http://www.stararchive.com/starc2000/sl/35375.html
17 July 1997 Physics Superfluidity in Helium 3, 17 July 1997. David M. Lee, DouglasD. osheroff and Robert C. Richardson, nobel prize 1996. 16.30 http://cern.web.cern.ch/CERN/Announcements/Colloquia/1997/17July.html
Extractions: The Discovery of Superfluid 3He Superfluid 3He was found through an accident. The transition was discovered in some pioneering cryogenic experiments and was originally mis-identified as the state of nuclear magnetic order in solid 3He. Subsequent NMR experiments, including an early version of MRI, revealed that liquid 3He undergoes a surprising pairing transition. The superfluid state is similar to superconducting state in metals but with an odd value of the pair angular momentum. The cryogenic techniques and early experiments will be described. Superfluidity in 3He: The Discovery Through the Eyes of a Graduate Student The speaker will recount the activities during a seven month period in which, as a graduate student, he participated in the discovery of three superfluid phases of liquid 3He. At the time, this discovery was the 'holy grail' of low temperature physics, yet, even after the final experiment, the three researchers were reluctant to identify these as BCS states, so unusual were the properties of the ordered states which they had observed.
The Alfred B. Nobel Prize Winners: Physics Advertisement. nobel Prize Winners for Physics. 1996, David M. Lee douglas D. OsheroffRobert C. Richardson, United States United States United States. http://history1900s.about.com/library/misc/blnobelphysics.htm