Nobel For Physics: All Laureates Appleton 1946 Percy Williams Bridgman 1945 Wolfgang Pauli 1944 isidor isaac Rabi1943 Otto The nobel Prize A History of Genius, Controversy and Prestige by http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/phy-list.html
Rabi, Isidor Isaac -- Encyclopædia Britannica Online Article American physicist who was awarded the nobel Prize for Physics MLA style rabi, IsidorIsaac. Encyclopædia Britannica 2003 Encyclopædia Britannica Premium http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=63931
Physics Nobel Laureates 1925 - 1949 The first nobel prize in physics was awarded to Wilhelm Röntgen in 1901 rabi, ISIDORISAAC , USA, Columbia University, New York, NY, * 1898, (in Rymanow, then http://www1.physik.tu-muenchen.de/~gammel/matpack/html/Chronics/physics_laureate
Extractions: The prize for 1926: PERRIN, JEAN BAPTISTE, France, Sorbonne University, Paris, "for his work on the discontinuous structure of matter, and especially for his discovery of sedimentation equilibrium". The prize was divided equally between: COMPTON, ARTHUR HOLLY, U.S.A., Chicago University, "for his discovery of the effect named after him";
Premi Nobel Fisica Translate this page 1946, PERCY WILLIAMS BRIDGMAN. 1945, WOLFGANG PAULI. 1944, isidor ISAACRABI. 1943, OTTO STERN. 1939, ERNEST ORLANDO LAWRENCE. 1938, ENRICO FERMI. http://www.econofisica.com/premi nobel fisica.htm
Extractions: 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
FÝZÝK NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ FIZIK nobel ÖDÜLLERI. 1901. RÖNTGEN, WILHELM CONRAD. 1944. rabi, ISIDORISAAC. ABD, Columbia Üniversitesi, New York, NY, d. 1898, ö. 1988 http://www.tubitak.gov.tr/nobel/fizik-nodul.html
Extractions: FÝZÝK NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ RÖNTGEN, WILHELM CONRAD Almanya, Münih Üniversitesi, d.1845, ö.1923: Sonradan adýyla anýlmaya baþlayacak olan önemli ýþýn tipini buluþuyla olanaklý kýldýðý üstün hizmetler için LORENTZ, HENDRIK ANTOON Hollanda, Leyden Üniversitesi, d.1853, ö. 1928 ZEEMAN, PIETER Hollanda, Amsterdam Üniversitesi, d.1865, ö. 1943: Manyetizmanýn radyasyon üzerine etkileri konusundaki çalýþmalarýyla verdikleri üstün hizmetler için BECQUEREL, ANTOINE HENRI Fransa, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, d.1852, ö.1908: Kendiliðinden radyoaktiflik olgusunu keþfiyle saðladýðý üstün hizmetler için CURIE, PIERRE Fransa, Ecole municipale de physique et de chimie industrielles, Paris, d.1859, ö. 1906; ve eþi: CURIE i MARIE, nee SKLODOWSKA Fransa, d.1867 (Varþova, Polonya), ö.1934: Profesör Henri Becquerel tarafýndan bulunan radyasyon olgusu üzerine yaptýklarý ortak çalýþmalarla saðladýklarý üstün hizmetler için RAYLEIGH, Lord (J. W. STRUTT) Ýngiltere, Royal Institution, Londra, d.1842, ö.1919: Önemli gazlarýn çoðunun yoðunluklarýný buluþu ve bu çalýþmalarý sýrasýnda argonu keþfediþi için LENARD, PHILIPP EDUARD ANTON
ART V6n4 - From The Un-easy Chair from Gerald Holton, Einstein, History, and other Passions, p. 229 IsidorIsaac rabi 18981988 physicist, received the nobel Prize in 1944. http://www.cincinnatiskeptics.org/newsletter/vol6/n4/editorial.html
Extractions: Home Newsletters Volume 6 No. 4 We generally think we ourselves are the best judges of our choices in drink, food, and medical practitioners. Yet, there is a sizeable amount of evidence we couldn't tell a mouse from an elephant. Consumers Reports once tested a large sample of coffee drinkers to identify the better quality coffees. It turned out, about a third of the sampled persons could not tell instant from brewed coffee, and another third could not identify them with certainty. Research on the taste differences in wines resulted in similar findings. My own very informal tests have shown most persons can't tell one whiskey from another, no matter what the price. I also doubt many can tell the difference between brands of vodka by taste or smell, and probably would not be able to tell vodka from gin. A recent survey of British taste buds by the Tropicana Food company revealed that 70 percent of Britons can't identify the flavor of mashed carrot, 40 percent couldn't distinguish cooked apples, 32 percent couldn't tell cooked pears, and 20 percent can't even identify a mashed potato. "The blindfold tests show that consumers have real difficulty in defining taste and become confused in identifying food types when they cannot see what they are eating or drinking," a Tropicana spokeswoman concluded. (Reuter) Hilary Clinton's proposals for national health care were heavily criticized because they "would have put limits on people's choice of doctors"; or at least 69 percent of respondents to a survey thought so. (Newsweek, 27-28 October 1994). The proposals in fact did not have such limits. Freedom to choose your own medical practitioner, whether conventional or quack, remains one of the big obstacles to achieving national health insurance. Yet, with the best will in the world, do you have the information to make a choice?
Nobel Prize For Physics nobel Prize for Physics. For years not listed, no award was made. 1901. 1944. IsidorIsaac rabi (US), for work on magnetic movements of atomic particles. 1945. http://homepages.shu.ac.uk/~acsdry/quizes/physics.htm
Extractions: 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 Albert A. Michelson (U.S.), for spectroscopic and metrologic investigations Gabriel Lippmann (France), for method of reproducing colors by photography Guglielmo Marconi (Italy) and Ferdinand Braun (Germany), for development of wireless Johannes D. van der Waals (Netherlands), for work with the equation of state for gases and liquids Wilhelm Wien (Germany), for his laws governing the radiation of heat Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes (Netherlands), for work leading to production of liquid helium Max von Laue (Germany), for discovery of diffraction of Roentgen rays passing through crystals