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  • A '''physicist''' is a [[scientist]] who focuses their studies on the subject of [[physics * [[Paul Dirac]], theoretical physicist, major contributor to [[quantum mechanics]]
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 12:22, 19 May 2008
  • 117 bytes (16 words) - 12:23, 19 May 2008
  • {{r|Experimental physicist}} {{r|Theoretical physicist}}
    503 bytes (64 words) - 09:07, 13 August 2009
  • 81 bytes (10 words) - 01:33, 4 December 2010
  • British physicist; author, television presenter and former member of the pop band D:Ream (bor
    114 bytes (16 words) - 08:14, 19 November 2011
  • 126 bytes (14 words) - 01:31, 4 December 2010
  • British physicist; author, television presenter and former member of the pop band D:Ream (bor
    137 bytes (18 words) - 08:17, 19 November 2011

Page text matches

  • {{r|Experimental physicist}} {{r|Theoretical physicist}}
    503 bytes (64 words) - 09:07, 13 August 2009
  • French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher.
    85 bytes (8 words) - 17:15, 22 February 2009
  • Dutch theoretical physicist (1853 - 1928)
    77 bytes (7 words) - 08:40, 16 November 2008
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>British physicist, broadcaster and author.
    77 bytes (8 words) - 04:36, 22 February 2012
  • Robert Boyle (1627 &ndash; 1691). British chemist and physicist.
    100 bytes (10 words) - 11:26, 28 June 2009
  • 20th-century physicist who formulated the theories of relativity.
    101 bytes (11 words) - 07:55, 17 May 2008
  • An Argentine physicist and philosopher of science (born 1919) .
    100 bytes (11 words) - 13:37, 27 November 2010
  • German physicist, inventor of air pump, known for the Magdeburg hemispheres.
    112 bytes (14 words) - 10:58, 1 July 2009
  • Dutch-American physicist (1900-1988) known for the discovery of electron spin.
    114 bytes (13 words) - 10:52, 4 January 2010
  • (1842 – 1923) Scottish chemist and physicist best-known for his invention of the Dewar flask.
    131 bytes (15 words) - 15:00, 25 January 2009
  • ...April 1629 - 8 June 1695) an internationally renowned Dutch mathematician, physicist and astronomer.
    140 bytes (14 words) - 13:02, 9 December 2008
  • (1858 - 1947) German physicist known for his foundational work on [[quantum theory]]; [[Nobel Prize]] 1918
    143 bytes (16 words) - 09:37, 14 January 2010
  • British physicist; author, television presenter and former member of the pop band D:Ream (bor
    114 bytes (16 words) - 08:14, 19 November 2011
  • British physicist; author, television presenter and former member of the pop band D:Ream (bor
    137 bytes (18 words) - 08:17, 19 November 2011
  • (1550 – 4 April 1617) The eighth Laird of Merchistoun, a mathematician, physicist, and astrologer.
    136 bytes (14 words) - 16:13, 13 May 2008
  • ...demy of Arts and Sciences every four years to an outstanding (theoretical) physicist.
    157 bytes (21 words) - 05:14, 29 September 2009
  • (Mézières 30 June 1791 &ndash; Paris 16 March 1841) French physicist, known for the Biot-Savart law.
    138 bytes (17 words) - 08:06, 21 June 2008
  • (1901-1954) Italian born nuclear physicist; designer of the first nuclear reactor.
    118 bytes (14 words) - 08:52, 7 July 2009
  • Canadian physicist (1918- ) who was awarded a Nobel Prize for his work in the development of n
    150 bytes (21 words) - 21:59, 22 May 2008
  • (Paris 1774 &ndash; Paris 1862) French physicist, mathematician, astronomer, and chemist best known for the Biot-Savart law.
    160 bytes (18 words) - 08:07, 21 June 2008
  • (1707 - 1783) [[Swiss]] [[mathematics|mathematician]] and [[physics|physicist]]; one of the greatest mathematicians of all time.
    164 bytes (18 words) - 10:09, 10 December 2008
  • (1819-1868), was a physicist who calculated the speed of light to within 1% of modern estimations.
    134 bytes (18 words) - 23:31, 17 February 2010
  • (Wittenberg October 24, 1804 &ndash; Göttingen June 23, 1891) German physicist known for his work in magnetism and on electromagnetic units.
    178 bytes (21 words) - 08:09, 21 June 2008
  • *[[Heinrich Hertz]] Physicist
    85 bytes (10 words) - 05:29, 24 September 2013
  • (22 August 1834 – 27 February 1906) American astronomer, physicist, inventor of the bolometer and pioneer of aviation.
    157 bytes (16 words) - 03:25, 4 September 2009
  • ...e theory of consciousness proposed in the mid-1990s by British theoretical physicist Sir Roger Penrose and American anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff.
    197 bytes (25 words) - 06:46, 13 May 2010
  • (Lyons 20 January, 1775 – Marseilles 10 June, 1836) French physicist and mathematician best known for his work in electricity and magnetism.
    178 bytes (20 words) - 08:05, 21 June 2008
  • [[German]] physicist (1686 − 1736) who proposed the use of the [[Fahrenheit (unit)|Fahrenheit]
    119 bytes (14 words) - 10:07, 3 December 2022
  • [[Physics|Physicist]] noted for contributions in [[nuclear reaction]]s and theory. [[Nobel Priz
    152 bytes (18 words) - 16:58, 18 March 2009
  • * [[Hans Christian Oersted]], nineteenth century Danish physicist.
    144 bytes (17 words) - 12:42, 31 May 2009
  • (1831 – 1879) Scottish physicist best known for his formulation of electromagnetic theory and the statistica
    164 bytes (19 words) - 14:30, 8 March 2009
  • (1842 &ndash; 1919) physicist who made fundamental discoveries in the fields of acoustics and optics; 190
    178 bytes (22 words) - 01:48, 30 June 2009
  • (Angoulême June 14, 1736 &ndash; Paris August 23, 1806) French physicist known for formulating a law for the force between two electrically charged
    193 bytes (24 words) - 08:05, 21 June 2008
  • was a French mathematician and physicist credited with describing the Fourier series based on which the Fourier tran
    174 bytes (24 words) - 00:30, 2 July 2008
  • (August 9, 1776 &ndash; July 9, 1856). An Italian physicist who proposed in 1811 Avogadro's law.
    132 bytes (14 words) - 02:26, 1 October 2008
  • (1728 – 1799) Scottish physicist and chemist, known for his discoveries of latent heat, specific heat, and c
    159 bytes (19 words) - 03:26, 21 May 2008
  • (21 May 1792, Paris – 19 September 1843, Paris) French physicist best known for the [[inertial force]] called after him ([[Coriolis force]])
    179 bytes (20 words) - 10:10, 22 March 2011
  • (1877 – 1944) English physicist who was awarded the 1917 Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of the ch
    177 bytes (22 words) - 16:04, 25 January 2009
  • (1882 – 1970) German-born British physicist and mathematician instrumental in the development of quantum mechanics, who
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  • (1867-1934), Polish-French physicist (Nobel Prize in 1903) and chemist (Nobel Prize in 1911), famous for her wor
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  • (1642–1727) English physicist and mathematician, best known for his elucidation of the universal theory o
    189 bytes (23 words) - 09:07, 14 October 2008
  • ...ctober 1885 - 18 November 1962) [[Nobel Prize]] winning [[Denmark|Danish]] physicist, who made important contributions to understanding the structure of [[atom]
    247 bytes (29 words) - 00:43, 17 March 2014
  • (22 February 1878 - 7 July 1909) Swiss theoretical physicist who developed the Ritz's combination principle on spectral lines, and furth
    232 bytes (26 words) - 05:04, 4 September 2009
  • (Rudkøbing, August 14, 1777 &ndash; Copenhagen, March 9, 1851) Danish physicist and chemist best known for his discovery of the influence of an electric cu
    237 bytes (32 words) - 08:07, 21 June 2008
  • * [[Samuel P. Langley]] Physicist, Aeronautical pioneer, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution
    230 bytes (30 words) - 12:36, 31 May 2009
  • (1892 – 1965) English physicist who received the 1947 Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to the k
    211 bytes (28 words) - 16:02, 25 January 2009
  • ...retary of Defense]] in the [[Jimmy Carter|Carter Administration]]; nuclear physicist with experience in [[arms control]]
    254 bytes (33 words) - 17:15, 30 July 2009
  • (1791 – 1867) Was an English physicist and chemist whose best known work was on the closely connected phenomena of
    248 bytes (32 words) - 06:01, 20 May 2008
  • {{r|Brian Cox (physicist)}}
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  • (29 November 1803 - 17 March 1853) Austrian mathematician and physicist, who in 1842 discovered the 'Doppler effect', where the observed frequency
    257 bytes (34 words) - 18:53, 13 September 2009
  • ...Times'': '[http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/20/us/20pound.html Robert Pound, physicist whose work advanced medicine, is dead at 90]'. April 19, 2010.</ref>
    963 bytes (135 words) - 13:02, 5 September 2014
  • (23 September 1819 - 18 September 1896) French physicist, who was the first to measure the speed of light without any recourse to as
    257 bytes (35 words) - 18:57, 13 September 2009
  • (1919-2010) American physicist whose work on the effect of gravity on light provided confirmation of Einst
    234 bytes (32 words) - 12:53, 5 September 2014
  • A '''physicist''' is a [[scientist]] who focuses their studies on the subject of [[physics * [[Paul Dirac]], theoretical physicist, major contributor to [[quantum mechanics]]
    1 KB (169 words) - 19:02, 5 May 2021
  • (1918–1988) An American physicist known for his scientific acumen, humor, and charismatic charm; drummer and
    411 bytes (50 words) - 00:01, 22 December 2009
  • * [[Wilhelm Eduard Weber]] (1804 &ndash; 1891) German physicist
    332 bytes (43 words) - 23:00, 23 September 2008
  • * [[Charles-Augustin de Coulomb]] French physicist
    225 bytes (26 words) - 21:35, 23 September 2008
  • *An introduction to Open science by physicist [[Michael Nielsen]], explaining that the reputation systems currently in us
    435 bytes (60 words) - 09:53, 7 December 2022
  • ...ic Intelligence from the [[United States intelligence community]]; nuclear physicist involved in [[fusion device|thermonuclear weapon]] design
    463 bytes (58 words) - 12:01, 19 March 2024
  • ...and non-therapeutic patient exposure to [[ionizing radiation]]. A health physicist, for example, will work with a [[radiology|radiologist]] to plan the mechan
    476 bytes (63 words) - 10:43, 8 April 2024
  • The mathematical physicist '''Walter Ritz''' [Sion (Switzerland) February 22, 1878 &ndash; Göttingen
    461 bytes (60 words) - 02:47, 14 September 2013
  • Fermions are named after the Italian-born physicist [[Enrico_Fermi|Enrico Fermi]] (1901-1954).
    468 bytes (72 words) - 20:43, 12 November 2020
  • '''Mario Bunge''' is an Argentine physicist and philosopher of science (born 1919) working since 1960s at McGill Univer
    541 bytes (69 words) - 04:11, 7 October 2013
  • ...ork" in everyday speech and very often in a way that is reminiscent of the physicist's definition of work; that is, to proceed along a path through an activity,
    2 KB (284 words) - 12:55, 14 February 2021
  • ...hesis that he made late in 1900. It stresses the influence of the Austrian physicist [[Ludwig Boltzmann]] (1844-1906) on Planck's thinking and especially Bolt
    468 bytes (67 words) - 11:56, 25 January 2011
  • * [[André-Marie Ampère]] The person, early 19th century French physicist and mathematician.
    530 bytes (70 words) - 12:42, 31 May 2009
  • [[Physics|Physicist]] and [[U.S. Representative]], ([[Democratic Party (United States)|D-]][[Ne
    720 bytes (81 words) - 10:00, 28 July 2023
  • {{r|Physicist}}
    450 bytes (58 words) - 17:34, 11 February 2021
  • '''Richard Garwin''' is a U.S. nuclear physicist who is deeply involved in national security policy. He is Senior Fellow for
    514 bytes (80 words) - 17:43, 22 March 2024
  • In 1903 a [[France|French]] [[physicist]] named [[René Prosper Blondlot]] announced the discovery of a subtle and In 1904 a visiting American physicist, [[Robert W. Wood]], visited Blondlot's lab, and was invited to view N-Rays
    2 KB (289 words) - 17:34, 11 February 2021
  • '''Max Planck''' (1858-1947) was a German physicist known for his foundational work on quantum theory. In 1900 he presented his
    681 bytes (97 words) - 21:03, 2 October 2020
  • '''Alfred Wegener''' (1880-1930) was a German physicist, meteorologist and explorer who developed one of the first theories of [[pl
    712 bytes (101 words) - 04:42, 5 November 2008
  • ...009/mar/02/god-particle-peter-higgs-portrait-lhc A painting of the British physicist whose work triggered the worldwide hunt for the "God particle"]
    968 bytes (140 words) - 16:09, 18 April 2012
  • ...hysics of Baseball''''' (2002) ISBN 0-06-008436-7. An examination by a PhD physicist of various aspects of the game of baseball from the perspective of the scie
    656 bytes (100 words) - 10:45, 29 May 2008
  • * Alfred Bader and Leonard Parker, ''Joseph Loschmidt, Physicist and Chemist'', Physics Today, vol. '''54'''(3), p. 45 (2001) [http://ptonl
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  • {{r|Physicist}}
    723 bytes (95 words) - 14:23, 7 October 2011
  • ::*'''<u>From the Website:</u>''' In 1999, legendary theoretical physicist Hans Bethe delivered three lectures on quantum theory to his neighbors at t
    847 bytes (125 words) - 18:40, 30 December 2008
  • ...scale is a [[temperature]] [[scale]] named after the [[Scotland|Scottish]] physicist and engineer, [[Willam John Macquorn Rankine]] (1820 − 1872), who propose
    844 bytes (117 words) - 19:15, 28 December 2012
  • ...enbeck''' (December 6, 1900 &ndash; October 31, 1988) was a Dutch-American physicist who, with [[Samuel Abraham Goudsmit]], proposed the concept of [[electron s ...ry Cahart Professor of Physics since 1954; he was appointed professor and physicist at the [[Rockefeller Medical Research Center]] at the [[State University of
    2 KB (357 words) - 10:17, 8 April 2023
  • ...the [[Earth]] of the year 2057 slowly freezes. [[particle physics|Particle physicist]] Dr [[Bryan Cox]] was involved with the film as an advisor on the hard [[s
    825 bytes (124 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • *Emilio Segrè, Enrico Fermi, Physicist (1970).
    802 bytes (112 words) - 13:18, 15 March 2024
  • ...(Wittenberg October 24, 1804 &ndash; Göttingen June 23, 1891) was a German physicist. In 1828 he became professor extraordinarius in [[Halle (Saale)|Halle]] and
    993 bytes (144 words) - 05:21, 29 May 2008
  • {{r|Physicist}}
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  • {{r|Physicist}}
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  • The coulomb is named for French physicist [[Charles-Augustin de Coulomb]] (1736–1806). Coulomb also developed the l
    1,010 bytes (146 words) - 11:10, 21 October 2021
  • ...e 50th anniversary (11 December, 1925) of the doctorate of the theoretical physicist [[Hendrik Antoon Lorentz]]. The gold medal is awarded once every four years
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  • ...Savart''' (30 June 1791 Mézières &ndash; 16 March 1841 Paris) was a French physicist, best known for the [[Biot-Savart law]]. V. A. McKusick and H. K. Wiskind, ''Félix Savart (1791–1841), Physician-Physicist: Early Studies Pertinent to the Understanding of Murmurs'', J. Hist. Med. A
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  • The law was first proposed in 1811 by the Italian physicist [[Amedeo Avogadro]], but it was not generally accepted until after 1858, wh
    1 KB (158 words) - 14:20, 26 November 2010
  • ...named after the Dutch physicist [[Hendrik Antoon Lorentz]] and the Danish physicist [[Ludvig Valentin Lorenz]].
    3 KB (478 words) - 08:14, 11 December 2008
  • ...885 - 18 November 1962) was a [[Nobel Prize]] winning [[Denmark|Danish]] [[physicist]]. He made important contributions to understanding the structure of [[Atom ...nitiators. It was in April 1944, when receiving correspondence from Soviet physicist Peter Kapitza, that he became aware that the [[Soviet Union]] knew of the a
    3 KB (472 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • The constant and the unit are named after the British physicist [[Michael Faraday]].
    1 KB (197 words) - 12:15, 20 December 2007
  • * [[Adi Bulsara]] &ndash; Physicist
    1 KB (155 words) - 09:16, 29 March 2024
  • ...ebruary 15, 1988; surname pronounced FINE-man; /ˈfaɪnmən/) was an American physicist known for his scientific acumen, humor, and charismatic charm. His accompli Feynman's brilliance as a physicist landed him smack in Los Alamos in 1942, just as he finished his Ph D in Phy
    3 KB (482 words) - 12:53, 25 June 2013
  • '''Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier''' (1768-1830) was a French mathematician and physicist. He is credited with describing the [[Fourier series]] based on which the [
    1 KB (184 words) - 13:47, 27 July 2020
  • ...given by [[Coulomb's law (magnetic)|Coulomb's law]] named after the French physicist [[Charles-Augustin de Coulomb]], who established clearly the non-existence ...he Danish physicist [[Hans-Christian Oersted]] in 1820. In 1825 the French physicist [[André-Marie Ampère]] discussed his earlier discovery that magnets exert
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  • The kelvin is named after the Irish-born physicist and engineer [[William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin]] (1824 – 1907), who wro
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  • ...e]]s. The proposal was put forward in the mid-1990s by British theoretical physicist [[Roger Penrose|Sir Roger Penrose]] and American anesthesiologist [[Stuart
    2 KB (221 words) - 17:18, 14 May 2010
  • ...e 19, 1623 - August 19, 1662) was a [[France|French]] [[mathematician]], [[physicist]], and [[philosopher]]. A [[child prodigy]] educated by his father, his ear
    2 KB (236 words) - 13:55, 6 June 2008
  • ...rate and distinct. However, in the early 20th century, the [[German]]-born physicist [[Albert Einstein]] showed that mass can change into energy and that energ
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  • '''Jean-Baptiste Biot''' (1774-1862) was a French physicist, mathematician, astronomer, and chemist.
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  • A '''physical system''' is the part of the universe that a physicist is interested in. What is not in the system is the environment or the ''sur ...his<ref>For linguistic reason we write "he" and "his" when referring to a physicist. This does not imply that physicists are necessarily male.</ref> studies to
    7 KB (1,068 words) - 11:41, 21 November 2009
  • Trained as a physicist, in 1919 he became a professsor at Oxford. He qualified as a pilot, to inve
    2 KB (266 words) - 22:31, 31 January 2009
  • ...ugh his lifetime John Dalton became a well known and respected chemist and physicist.
    2 KB (271 words) - 08:12, 26 September 2007
  • ...ol Wb) is the [[SI]] unit of [[magnetic flux]]. It is named for the German physicist [[Wilhelm Eduard Weber]].
    2 KB (261 words) - 09:08, 14 September 2013
  • The unit is named in honor of the German mathematician and physicist [[Carl Friedrich Gauss]].
    2 KB (269 words) - 15:51, 31 October 2021
  • ...th the symbol and the tensor are named after the Italian mathematician and physicist [[Tullio Levi-Civita]].
    2 KB (332 words) - 04:25, 12 October 2013
  • ...re|MBE]] (born 1st January 1964) is a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[physics|physicist]], [[media|broadcaster]] and [[author]]. His works include: ''[[Fermat's la
    2 KB (330 words) - 05:11, 22 February 2012
  • Nowadays, the physicist's definition of the Dirac delta function
    5 KB (786 words) - 21:28, 19 February 2010
  • ...mb''' (Angoulême June 14, 1736 &ndash; Paris August 23, 1806) was a French physicist. He is known for [[Coulomb's law]], which is an [[inverse-square law]] for
    2 KB (292 words) - 18:30, 29 June 2009
  • | title = The Stock Market and Finance from a Physicist's Viewpoint
    6 KB (623 words) - 10:16, 26 September 2007
  • ...etic theory]] of [[James Clerk Maxwell]] in terms of analogies that a non-physicist would understand. In 1873 he became the third Baron Rayleigh, on the death
    2 KB (306 words) - 15:17, 18 August 2009
  • ...Rudkøbing, August 14, 1777 &ndash; Copenhagen, March 9, 1851) was a Danish physicist and chemist. He is best known for his discovery of the influence of an ele ...ree years traveling in Europe. In Germany, he met Johann Wilhelm Ritter, a physicist. Their conversations drew Ørsted into the study of physics. He became a pr
    5 KB (738 words) - 06:22, 12 September 2013
  • The physicist [[Otto von Guericke]] and the composer [[Georg Telemann]] were born in Magd
    2 KB (348 words) - 06:14, 15 October 2013
  • ...rector of the [[Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory]] (1952–1961). As a physicist, His research interests included nuclear explosive design, applications of
    2 KB (313 words) - 09:39, 14 February 2024
  • '''Enrico Fermi''' (1901-1954) was an Italian-born nuclear physicist and designer of the first [[nuclear reactor]]. Fermi was a very broadly oriented physicist; in fact he was one of the last physicists who made important contributions
    7 KB (1,048 words) - 13:18, 15 March 2024
  • *[[David Anthony Alberola]], (1859&ndash;1927), American chemist and physicist *[[Amedeo Avogadro]], (1776&ndash;1856), Italian physicist
    14 KB (1,549 words) - 05:42, 6 March 2024
  • The law is named for the Estonian-born physicist [[Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz|Emil Lenz]] (1804 &ndash; 1865), who publish
    2 KB (388 words) - 12:33, 11 June 2009
  • ...mbership also included scientists; the chemist [[Carl l. Alsberg]] and the physicist [[Richard C. Tolman]], some medical doctors; [[Allen Carpenter]] and [[John
    2 KB (324 words) - 14:02, 7 February 2009
  • ...ted a new fundamental particle of matter, subsequently (1935) named by the physicist [[Enrico Fermi]] (1901-1954),<ref name=ferminobelbio>[http://nobelprize.org
    6 KB (932 words) - 09:45, 13 March 2022
  • An '''Hermitian operator''' is the physicist's version of an object that mathematicians call a [[self-adjoint operator]]
    8 KB (1,273 words) - 11:29, 9 July 2009
  • ...use two ''different'' standard masses are denoted by ''amu''. There is the physicist's ''amu'' ( = 1/1.000&thinsp;317&thinsp;9 ''u'') and there is the chemist's
    7 KB (1,035 words) - 13:02, 11 September 2011
  • ...Atlas 2018 online, last access 12/3/2022</ref>, named after the [[German]] physicist [[Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit]] (1686 − 1736), who proposed it in 1724. The
    3 KB (386 words) - 13:23, 2 February 2023
  • ::*'''<u>From the Website:</u>''' In 1999, legendary theoretical physicist Hans Bethe delivered three lectures on quantum theory to his neighbors at t
    4 KB (577 words) - 06:34, 29 April 2023
  • The Levi-Civita symbol&mdash;named after the Italian mathematician and physicist [[Tullio Levi-Civita]]&mdash;occurs mainly in differential geometry and mat
    3 KB (390 words) - 11:35, 12 March 2011
  • ...November 20, 1602, Magdeburg &ndash; May 11, 1686, Hamburg) was a German physicist, engineer, and natural philosopher who invented the first [[air]] pump and
    3 KB (399 words) - 09:16, 6 March 2024
  • ...e Of ET Visitors, According To Scientific Review Panel Convened By Pro-UFO Physicist
    3 KB (388 words) - 13:40, 24 August 2010
  • ...son was popularised as the "God particle" by the [[Nobel Prize]]-winning [[physicist]] [[Leon M. Lederman]] in his 1993 popular science book ''The God Particle: ...is is an important result and should earn Peter Higgs the Nobel Prize” the physicist predicted. “But it is a pity in a way, because the great advances in phys
    8 KB (1,119 words) - 14:16, 18 September 2020
  • ...nceDaily: Thunderstorm Research Shocks Conventional Theories; Florida Tech Physicist Throws Open Debate On Lightning's Cause]
    5 KB (707 words) - 19:15, 17 October 2013
  • ...ich split apart over eons were put forward by [[Alfred Wegener]], a German physicist born in 1880, in his book [http://caliban.mpiz-koeln.mpg.de/~stueber/wegene
    3 KB (512 words) - 10:58, 8 April 2008
  • ...le-1]] assembled and tested in 1942 at the [[University of Chicago]] under physicist [[Enrico Fermi]]. In 1951 in Idaho, [[Experimental Breeder Reactor 1]] (EB
    4 KB (551 words) - 14:10, 2 February 2023
  • It was named after [[Evangelista Torricelli]], an [[Italy|Italian]] physicist and mathematician who, in 1644, first explained that a [[barometer]] respon
    4 KB (590 words) - 10:47, 9 September 2023
  • ...named for the Swiss mathematical physicist [[Walter Ritz]] and the English physicist Lord Rayleigh ([[John William Strutt]]). Among numerical mathematicians it ...ture the method is known as the Ritz method, called after the mathematical physicist [[Walter Ritz]],<ref>W. Ritz, Über eine neue Methode zur Lösung gewisser
    12 KB (1,893 words) - 04:51, 25 March 2010
  • ....</ref> (21 May 1792, Paris &ndash; 19 September 1843, Paris) was a French physicist best known for the description of one of the three [[inertial force]]s that
    3 KB (554 words) - 20:16, 22 March 2011
  • ...formulation of the [[Schrödinger equation]] by the [[Austria]]n [[physics|physicist]] [[Erwin Schrödinger]], the techniques available were rather crude and sp
    4 KB (592 words) - 03:37, 15 November 2007
  • ...lla Shalizi, 10 April 1993, [http://www.santafe.edu/~shalizi/Daedalus.html Physicist Shalizi on ''Daedalus''].
    3 KB (502 words) - 19:20, 1 May 2008
  • ...one square [[Metre (unit)|metre]]. It is named for the [[France|French]] [[physicist]] and [[mathematician]], [[Blaise Pascal]] (1623 - 1662), who did significa
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  • ...https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/science/14wheeler.html John A. Wheeler, Physicist Who Coined the Term ‘Black Hole,’ Is Dead at 96], New York Times.</ref> ...idea of the universe starting out from an atom originated from the Belgian physicist contemporary to Einstein's time, George Lemaître. On March 28, 1949, the E
    9 KB (1,324 words) - 08:30, 31 July 2023
  • ...675, hydrometers were developed by [[Robert Boyle]], a British chemist and physicist. Around 1798, [[Antoine Baumé]], a French scientist, designed the [[Hydrom
    5 KB (749 words) - 17:40, 7 June 2010
  • Frank Wilczek, a theoretical physicist at MIT and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics (2004), might speak for
    5 KB (690 words) - 17:36, 28 June 2012
  • ...m individual [[Atom_(science)|atoms]] to macroscopic biological systems, [[physicist]]s study a wide range of physical phenomena. ...sics. There have been a few exceptions, such as great [[Italy | Italian]] physicist [[Enrico Fermi]] (1901–1954), who made fundamental contributions to both
    14 KB (1,896 words) - 14:20, 27 December 2022
  • ...n homeworld Xen. The player is put in the clothes of the young theoretical physicist Gordon Freeman, who is expecting a quiet day at the lab. The experiment for
    4 KB (664 words) - 08:42, 15 July 2013
  • ...[[electron orbital|atomic orbital]]s. They are named after the [[physics|physicist]] [[John C. Slater]], who introduced them in 1930<ref>J.C. Slater, ''Atomic
    5 KB (822 words) - 17:36, 14 November 2007
  • ...mano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro, conte di Quaregna e di Cerreto) was an Italian physicist. He proposed in 1811 ''Avogadro's law''. This law states that equal volumes
    4 KB (605 words) - 01:29, 7 February 2010
  • ...rch 8, 1923) was a [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[theoretical physics|theoretical physicist]]. His name is primarily associated with the [[van der Waals equation]] of ...by his son Johannes Diderik van der Waals, Jr. who also was a theoretical physicist. At the age of 72 (in 1910) van der Waals was awarded the Nobel Prize. He d
    10 KB (1,520 words) - 09:14, 2 March 2024
  • ...rch 8, 1923) was a [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[theoretical physics|theoretical physicist]]. His name is primarily associated with the [[van der Waals equation]] of ...by his son Johannes Diderik van der Waals, Jr. who also was a theoretical physicist. At the age of 72 (in 1910) van der Waals was awarded the Nobel Prize. He d
    10 KB (1,521 words) - 09:14, 2 March 2024
  • The boson is called after the Indian physicist [[Satyendra Nath Bose]] (1894&ndash;1974), who was the first to note that ...physics. Its status can only be upgraded to 1 after an elementary-particle physicist has worked on it.''
    13 KB (2,014 words) - 04:59, 1 November 2013
  • The physicist's proof of these properties proceeds by making proper substitutions into th
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  • The force is named after the Dutch physicist [[Hendrik Antoon Lorentz]], who gave its equation in 1892.<ref>H. A. Lorent
    5 KB (833 words) - 21:31, 26 March 2022
  • ...nd and colleague, Giovanni Alfonso] Borelli [famous Italian mathematician, physicist and physiologist], published at Bologna in 1661 and subsequently reprinted
    5 KB (691 words) - 01:31, 7 June 2011
  • ...entionally indicated by ''H''. The term "enthalpy" was coined by the Dutch physicist [[Heike Kamerling Onnes]].<ref>Alfred W. Porter, (in: ''The Generation and
    5 KB (786 words) - 15:36, 2 December 2009
  • ...ly, the use of the name for the total force is correct, because the Dutch physicist [[Johannes Diderik van der Waals|J. D. van der Waals]], who lent his name t
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  • ...tionships between these fields. The equations are named after the Scottish physicist [[James Clerk Maxwell]], who published them (in a somewhat old-fashioned no ...en called [[magnetic induction]] or magnetic flux density.</ref> The Dutch physicist [[Hendrik Antoon Lorentz|Lorentz]] showed in the 1890s that the macroscopic
    18 KB (2,680 words) - 18:46, 16 December 2010
  • ...ember of the Berlin Circle. Was he a philosopher? Yes. Mathematician? Yes. Physicist? Yes. Probabilist? Yes. Logician? Yes. And more!
    5 KB (770 words) - 05:35, 26 December 2007
  • ...he received a letter from physicist [[Albert Einstein]] (drafted by fellow physicist [[Leó Szilárd]]) urging the study of [[nuclear fission]] for military pur ...c weapon. The scientific director of the Los Alamos site was the American physicist [[J. Robert Oppenheimer]]. The [[Hanford Site]] in eastern [[Washington (U
    19 KB (2,853 words) - 09:20, 22 April 2024
  • In 2007, the retired Princeton University physicist Freeman Dyson put forth an interesting and innovative interpretation of rur
    6 KB (887 words) - 08:35, 14 October 2013
  • ...their way to a rival firm in Germany for several years now. A world-class physicist become a wealthy industrialist, Wasserman is at home in both upper-class En
    5 KB (781 words) - 04:31, 21 March 2024
  • ...arl Friedrich Gauss|Gauss]]&mdash;and became assistant to the mathematical physicist [[Wilhelm Eduard Weber]]. Bernhard Riemann made his "Habilitation" (advance
    5 KB (751 words) - 11:37, 25 March 2022
  • ...t, since it has been pursued for several centuries and most of the great [[physicist]]s, [[engineer]]s and [[applied mathematician]]s have made contributions to
    6 KB (916 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • ...free field. The decomposition is called after the German physiologist and physicist [[Hermann von Helmholtz]] (1821 &ndash; 1894).
    11 KB (1,756 words) - 14:38, 12 April 2009
  • ...s (say the fusion energy of protons with oxygen-nuclei). However, a plasma physicist studying the thermodynamics of fusion reactions will include nuclear energy The Gibbs free energy, often denoted by ''G'' in honor of the American physicist [[J. Willard Gibbs]], is defined by
    16 KB (2,628 words) - 14:15, 12 December 2021
  • ...magnetic quantities. The units are named for the German mathematician and physicist [[Carl Friedrich Gauss]], who was the first to define magnetic units.
    11 KB (1,527 words) - 17:15, 2 November 2021
  • ...ntum mechanics)|transformation theory]], invented by Cambridge theoretical physicist [[Paul Dirac]], which unifies and generalizes the two earliest formulations The [[Copenhagen interpretation]], due largely to the Danish theoretical physicist [[Niels Bohr]], is the interpretation of quantum mechanics most widely acce
    37 KB (5,578 words) - 04:54, 21 March 2024
  • ...[Herve This]] (chemist), [[Nicholas Kurti]] (physicist), [[Peter Barham]] (physicist), [[Harold McGee]] (author), [[Shirley Corriher]] (biochemist, author), [[H
    13 KB (1,979 words) - 08:30, 24 September 2023
  • ...on that 'Nature abhors a vacuum'. Shortly thereafter, [[Britain|British]] physicist and chemist [[Robert Boyle]] had learned of Guericke's designs and in 1656, ...interpretation. In precursory form, classical thermodynamics derives from physicist [[Robert Boyle]]’s 1662 postulate that the pressure ''P'' of a given quan
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  • ...ynonyms. Especially Hartree, (often in collaboration with his retired, non-physicist father), performed many calculations on atoms. Because of their spherical s The HF and LCAO-MO threads were joined in 1951 by the Dutch-American physicist [[Clemens C.J. Roothaan]]<ref>C. C.J. Roothaan, ''New Developments in Molec
    20 KB (3,082 words) - 17:39, 9 December 2008
  • ...s), proposed that electrons might have wave-like properties. The Austrian physicist [[Erwin Schrödinger]] (1887-1961) showed in 1926 that one could treat an e In 1924, the Austrian-American physicist [[Wolfgang Pauli]] (1900-1958) inferred that only two electrons can occupy
    31 KB (4,638 words) - 18:09, 29 October 2017
  • Theoretical [[Physics|physicist]], [[Cosmology|cosmologist]], [[Atrobiology|astrobiologist]] and science po ...>From Article:</u>'''&nbsp;[At the time of this article:] Paul Davies is a physicist in the Australian Centre for Astrobiology, Macquarie University, Sydney, an
    17 KB (2,563 words) - 15:36, 28 June 2012
  • ...and 235 miles) from the Earth's surface. The Kármán line, named after the physicist [[Theodore von Kármán]], is in the thermosphere at an [[altitude]] of 100
    7 KB (1,143 words) - 19:29, 31 August 2009
  • ...07 - 18 September 1783) was a pioneering [[Swiss]] [[mathematician]] and [[physicist]] and widely considered to be one of the greatest mathematicians of all tim
    6 KB (1,084 words) - 03:54, 1 November 2010
  • The '''Pauli spin matrices''' (named after physicist [[Wolfgang Ernst Pauli]]) are a set of unitary [[Hermitian matrix|Hermitian
    7 KB (1,096 words) - 05:49, 17 October 2013
  • ...name=Brunner/> This effect was proposed in 1948 by [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[physicist]] [[Hendrik B. G. Casimir]], who considered the quantized [[electromagnetic ...tes how the Casimir force could be put to use in principle was proposed by physicist [[Robert Forward]] in 1984 (see below). A "vacuum fluctuation battery" coul
    16 KB (2,522 words) - 14:33, 14 May 2023
  • ...trick Blackett]], a Royal Navy veteran and [[Nobel Prize]]-winning British physicist.<ref name="telegraph1">{{cite news |last1=Corfield |first1=Gareth |title=Ro
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  • Eric Smith, a theoretical physicist at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico, certainly thinks so. “''Darwinia Roderick Dewar, a theoretical physicist and ecosystem modeler working at the French agricultural research agency's
    23 KB (3,582 words) - 13:26, 22 August 2013
  • '''John Playfair''' (1748-1819), mathematician and physicist, was born on the 10th of March 1748 at Benvie, Forfarshire, in [[Scotland]]
    7 KB (1,158 words) - 14:39, 17 February 2011
  • '''[[Edward Teller]]''' was an eminent and controversial theoretical physicist. He was born as ''Teller Ede'' in [[Budapest]] ([[Hungary]]) on January 15 ...tudy theoretical physics under [[Arnold Sommerfeld]], a great mathematical physicist who made important contributions to the development of [[quantum mechanics]
    28 KB (4,424 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...st as well and later married [[Wander Johannes de Haas]], an experimental physicist of some renown, successor in Leiden of [[Heike Kamerling-Onnes]]. ...an electric and/or a magnetic field. Also, Lorentz remained a classical physicist in that he could not accept that the length contraction (now called the ''[
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  • ...ote his work ''Ethics'' along the lines of the ''Elements'' and so did the physicist [[Isaac Newton|Newton]] when he composed his opus magnum ''Principia''.
    8 KB (1,314 words) - 11:25, 13 January 2020
  • ...fter Faraday's discovery, between 1861 and 1864, the Scottish mathematical physicist [[James Clerk Maxwell]] formulated the mathematical expression relating the
    9 KB (1,549 words) - 12:18, 11 June 2009
  • ...ental tradition of obscuritanism and misusing the language of science. The physicist [[Alan Sokal]] pulled off a [[hoax]] on ''[[Social Text]]'', a cultural stu
    8 KB (1,201 words) - 11:48, 2 February 2023
  • ...the work of Clausius, between the years 1873-76 the American mathematical physicist [[Willard Gibbs]] published a series of three papers, the most famous one b
    17 KB (2,659 words) - 10:00, 5 November 2009
  • ...1927. Heitler and London's method was extended by the American theoretical physicist [[John C. Slater]] and the American theoretical chemist [[Linus Pauling]] t
    9 KB (1,219 words) - 14:19, 19 October 2010
  • ...sician and chemist, James Anderson, a lawyer and agronomist, Joseph Black, physicist and chemist, and James Hutton, the first modern geologist.<ref> Denby, op.
    8 KB (1,192 words) - 18:54, 13 January 2021
  • In 1687, the English physicist and mathematician Sir [[Isaac Newton]] published the famous ''[[Principia]] ...itation held until the beginning of the 20th century, when the German-born physicist [[Albert Einstein]] proposed the [[general relativity|general theory of rel
    17 KB (2,543 words) - 19:59, 19 March 2023
  • ...e is in mathematics, and he became a translator for [[Andrei Sakharov]], a physicist associated with nuclear weapons. When he applied for an exit visa in 1973,
    8 KB (1,254 words) - 15:33, 4 April 2024
  • ...1643 by [[Evangelista Torricelli]] (1608-1647), Italian mathematician and physicist, from an idea by [[Galileo Galilei]] (1564-1642); the [[anemometer]] for me
    9 KB (1,226 words) - 15:00, 4 March 2021
  • ...al discussions, such as the 1997 symposium on physical evidence from UFOs. Physicist Stanton Friedman is an established UFO researcher.<ref name="urlStanton Fri Another is physicist Dr. Bruce Maccabee, who was a member of National Investigations Committee o
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  • ...in 1926 by [[Robert Goddard (scientist)|Robert Goddard]], an [[American]] physicist and rocket pioneer.<ref>{{citation||title=The First Liquid Fuel Rocket|publ
    10 KB (1,535 words) - 13:11, 23 October 2021
  • ...m in a universe without physicists, and physicists are made up of atoms. A physicist is an atom's way of knowing about atoms. ...f>Warren WS. (2000) [http://books.google.com/books?id=D9HPLJr3qwQC&dq=%22a+physicist+is+an+atom's+way%22&lr=&source=gbs_navlinks_s ''The physical basis of chemi
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  • ...lt's pendulum''', demonstrated in Paris in 1851, is named after the French physicist [[Léon Foucault]]. It is a device that demonstrates the [[Earth's rotation
    12 KB (2,156 words) - 12:50, 6 March 2011
  • The Danish physicist [[Hans Christian Oersted|Ørsted]] noticed in April 1820, while experimenti
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  • ...adro]], and the Loschmidt constant ''L'' is named after the Czech-Austrian physicist [[Josef Loschmidt]].
    19 KB (2,947 words) - 20:20, 27 December 2020
  • [[John Dalton]], an [[English]] chemist, meteorologist and physicist, first propounded his law of partial pressures in 1803 and published it in
    12 KB (1,983 words) - 11:44, 13 September 2013
  • [[John Dalton]], an [[English]] chemist, meteorologist, and physicist, first propounded his law of partial pressures in 1803 and published it in
    12 KB (1,987 words) - 13:09, 3 November 2021
  • *The physicist and philosopher '''[[Moritz Schlick]]''', one of the first philosophers int *The physicist '''[[Philipp Frank]]''', a student of [[David Hilbert]] and [[Ludwig Boltzm
    30 KB (4,343 words) - 13:59, 18 February 2024
  • ...lements' atomic weights<ref>We now know, largely following the work of the physicist, [[Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley]] (Gorin 1996), that the elements' propertie ...; font-family: Gill sans MT, Trebuchet MS;">Brilliant chemist, first-class physicist, a fruitful researcher in the field of hydrodynamics, meteorology, geology,
    29 KB (4,352 words) - 06:36, 6 March 2024
  • str physicist = "Max Planck" foo(hbar, physicist) // Wrong because foo() expects (int, str) and gets (float, str)
    25 KB (3,897 words) - 01:49, 8 October 2013
  • ...roat is called the '''''Venturi effect''''' and is named after the Italian physicist [[Giovanni Battista Venturi]] (1746 - 1822) who first observed the effect.
    12 KB (1,976 words) - 16:12, 10 February 2024
  • ===&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A physicist speaks of egalitarianism===
    32 KB (4,738 words) - 05:41, 8 January 2014
  • ...scattering]]. It was named after [[Lord Rayleigh]], an [[England|English]] physicist who first described it in the 1870s.<ref name=BlueSky/><ref name=BlueSky2/>
    12 KB (1,867 words) - 08:51, 30 June 2023
  • ...an Italian pharmacist from Padua. He named the bacteria after the Italian physicist Giacinto Serrati. He first spotted it on cornmeal mush, polenta. The red co
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  • '''Joseph Black''' (1728-1799), was a Scottish chemist and physicist, known for the concepts of [[latent heat]] and [[specific heat]], and for t
    11 KB (1,779 words) - 21:23, 16 February 2010
  • ...[sulphur]] and [[chlorine]] gas. In 1811, Augustine Jean Fresnel, a French physicist, discovered a cleaner process for producing sodium carbonate by bubbling [[
    13 KB (1,788 words) - 09:02, 4 May 2024
  • ...t so as to be visible to the first humans on the relevant day of creation. Physicist and creationist Russell Humphreys attempted to provide an alternative expla
    11 KB (1,790 words) - 09:53, 11 June 2023
  • ...'' (Lyons 20 January, 1775 &ndash; Marseilles 10 June, 1836) was a French physicist and mathematician. His most important contributions are [[Ampere's law]],
    10 KB (1,656 words) - 01:58, 6 February 2010
  • ...of a field with an ether is subtle and not easy to understand for a modern physicist. The ether, in the view of Maxwell and almost all physicists at that time, ...gths of visible light that are on the order of 500 nm). As a 19th century physicist, who had studied under [[Hermann von Helmholtz]], Hertz was committed to th
    25 KB (4,057 words) - 09:08, 15 December 2010
  • ...rying wires. The equation is named for the early nineteenth century French physicist and mathematician [[André-Marie Ampère]].
    14 KB (2,145 words) - 11:48, 21 April 2011
  • [[Max Delbrück]] was a physicist who recognized some of the biological implications of [[quantum physics]].
    13 KB (2,038 words) - 06:56, 9 June 2009
  • ...mic orbitals of the central ion. An important contributor was the American physicist [[John Van Vleck]]. The extended model propagated by Van Vleck is known as
    15 KB (2,390 words) - 10:11, 5 February 2010
  • ...ce in quantum mechanics. It is an indispensable discipline for the working physicist, irrespective of their field of specialization, be it [[solid state physics
    16 KB (2,632 words) - 04:33, 23 September 2021
  • ...n|Anthony.Sebastian]] started [[Matter (chemistry)]]. Linked [[Matter]], a physicist's perspective, as parent topic, and epigraphed it as 'See also:'. [[User:An
    25 KB (3,615 words) - 05:02, 8 March 2024
  • ...[sulphur]] and [[chlorine]] gas. In 1811, Augustine Jean Fresnel, a French physicist, discovered a cleaner process for producing sodium carbonate by bubbling [[
    14 KB (1,996 words) - 09:02, 4 May 2024
  • Radiation biologist Tikvah Alper and physicist J.S. Griffith developed the theory in the 1960s that some [[transmissible s
    13 KB (2,087 words) - 12:48, 11 June 2009
  • ...ir Archibald Napier of Merchiston and Janet Bothwell, was a mathematician, physicist, astrologer and 8th [[Laird]] of Merchistoun. His surname appears in many d
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  • ...t in 1913. It was independently discovered in the same year by the Italian physicist [[Antonino Lo Surdo]], and in Italy it is thus sometimes called the '''Star
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  • The unit is named after the Dutch/American chemical physicist [[Peter Debye]].
    17 KB (2,690 words) - 01:15, 22 September 2009
  • ...patial and temporal behavior of quantum-mechanical systems. [[Austria]]n [[physicist]] [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1933/schrodinger.ht
    17 KB (2,678 words) - 10:12, 9 May 2011
  • ...rthplace of [[Ernest Rutherford|Lord Rutherford]], the Nobel prize-winning physicist whose image appears on New Zealand's one hundred dollar banknote (the large
    14 KB (2,175 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • The modern statement: "work is force times path" is due to French physicist [[Gustave-Gaspard Coriolis]],<ref>G. Coriolis, ''Du Calcul de l'Effet des M
    17 KB (2,892 words) - 23:00, 26 May 2010
  • ...onstantijn Huygens]], was an internationally renowned Dutch mathematician, physicist and astronomer. He discovered [[Saturn]]'s rings and its moon [[Titan]], a
    13 KB (2,050 words) - 03:41, 17 October 2013
  • ...uch an approach explicitly defended by eminent scientists—for example, the physicist Sir Arthur Eddington: "it is also a good rule not to put overmuch confidenc
    14 KB (2,214 words) - 16:43, 14 July 2009
  • ...inburgh, June 13, 1831 &ndash; Cambridge, November 5, 1879) was a Scottish physicist best known for his formulation of [[electromagnetism|electromagnetic theory ...[[Peter Guthrie Tait]], who would become also a distinguished mathematical physicist and one of the advocates of [[William Rowan Hamilton|Hamilton]]'s [[quatern
    35 KB (5,595 words) - 12:26, 6 September 2013
  • In 1939, the [[Russian]] physicist [[Pyotr Kapitsa]] perfected the design of centrifugal expansion turbines. H
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  • The term is perhaps best known because of a speech by physicist [[Richard Feynman]] at a [[Caltech]] commencement, wherein he referred to "
    13 KB (2,038 words) - 04:35, 26 October 2013
  • ...13, 1831 &ndash; Cambridge, November 5, 1879) was a [[Scotland|Scottish]] physicist best known for his formulation of [[electromagnetism|electromagnetic theory ...[[Peter Guthrie Tait]], who would become also a distinguished mathematical physicist and one of the advocates of [[William Rowan Hamilton|Hamilton]]'s [[quatern
    35 KB (5,571 words) - 12:27, 6 September 2013
  • ...uary 25, 1627 &ndash; London, December 30, 1691) was a British chemist and physicist, mainly known for [[Ideal gas law|Boyle's law]] (1662) that states that the
    13 KB (2,087 words) - 09:16, 6 March 2024
  • ...of Energy|Energy Secretary]],<ref>An appointment welcome by, for example, physicist [[Lawrence Krauss]]: see ''New Scientist'', '[http://www.newscientist.com/a
    31 KB (4,594 words) - 08:40, 28 April 2024
  • ...Irrational'' page244, Harper Collins, 2008</ref>. That remark by a famous physicist is an apt reference to the uniquely difficult problem of dealing with human
    18 KB (2,739 words) - 19:47, 7 March 2024
  • ...antaneous effect at another location a very great distance away. No less a physicist than Einstein appears to have been tripped up by this particular incorrect
    17 KB (2,773 words) - 20:36, 6 November 2020
  • ...One approach to this is the ekpyrotic cyclic model posited by a number of physicist in the early 21st century, notably Justin Khoury, Burt A. Ovrut, Paul J. St
    17 KB (2,731 words) - 19:52, 26 October 2020
  • ...ity to determine geologic time was first suggested in 1905 by New Zealand physicist '''Ernest Rutherford'''. Rutherford had determined that radioactive decay i
    42 KB (5,498 words) - 18:08, 10 October 2013
  • In an essay, Nobel-prize winning physicist [http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1977/anderson-bio
    17 KB (2,623 words) - 09:04, 14 July 2015
  • ...and the staff of the KWI) were forced to resign. Although the (non-Jewish) physicist [[Max Planck]] pleaded in his function of president of the Kaiser Wilhelm S
    15 KB (2,281 words) - 02:47, 24 March 2010
  • ...has no guide but precise mathematical rigor and care in the argument. The physicist, who knows more or less how the answer is going to come out, can sort of gu
    22 KB (3,436 words) - 22:46, 28 July 2013
  • ...rs, and the Field Artillery.<blockquote>LT Charles B. Bazzoni, an American physicist who commanded Sound Ranging Section No. 1, complained that battery officers
    19 KB (2,822 words) - 16:21, 30 March 2024
  • ...and 235 miles) from the Earth's surface. The Kármán line, named after the physicist [[Theodore von Kármán]], is in the thermosphere at an [[altitude]] of 100
    22 KB (3,363 words) - 19:40, 9 January 2021
  • ...ription:</u> Half a century ago, before the discovery of DNA, the Austrian physicist and philosopher Erwin Schrödinger inspired a generation of scientists by r
    18 KB (2,682 words) - 02:51, 19 September 2013
  • ...18, 1955) was a [[Germany|German]]-born [[theoretical physics|theoretical physicist]]. Popularly regarded as the most important scientist of the 20th century, Abram Joffe, a Soviet physicist who had met Einstein, wrote in an obituary of him: "For physics, and especi
    69 KB (10,580 words) - 15:14, 4 April 2024
  • ...does have a precise meaning in mathematics, and sometimes that is what the physicist means as well. A coordinate ''system'' in mathematics is a facet of [[geome
    29 KB (4,366 words) - 09:10, 26 March 2011
  • The Arab physicist Abu Ali Hasan Ibn al-Haitham (more often known in the West as [[Alhazen]])
    22 KB (3,288 words) - 18:53, 9 July 2010
  • ...tter. [[Isaac Newton]] (1643-1727), whom we call today a mathematician and physicist, published his signal work in physics as <i>The Mathematical Principles of
    24 KB (3,602 words) - 11:33, 14 March 2018
  • Nuclear Physicist [[Edward Teller#Early life and education|Edward Teller]], are often driven
    22 KB (3,134 words) - 06:59, 9 March 2012
  • ...tter. [[Isaac Newton]] (1643-1727), whom we call today a mathematician and physicist, published his signal work in physics as <i>The Mathematical Principles of
    24 KB (3,620 words) - 06:14, 15 September 2013
  • His literary executors were two old friends: the physicist and chemist [[Joseph Black]], and the geologist [[James Hutton]]. Smith lef
    22 KB (3,614 words) - 06:30, 13 September 2013
  • ...eory. It turns out that those insights emerged gradually while Dalton, the physicist, worked to satisfy scientific passions not driven by a need to enhance his
    26 KB (4,140 words) - 06:36, 6 March 2024
  • ...al gas liquefaction dates back to the 1820s when [[Great Britain|British]] physicist [[Michael Faraday]] experimented with liquefying different types of gases.
    24 KB (3,746 words) - 09:37, 6 March 2024
  • ...d edit ''Astounding''. He might quit and go into science. 'I'm a nuclear physicist, you know,' he said, looking me right in the eye." <ref>''Hell's Cartograph
    23 KB (3,560 words) - 17:18, 3 April 2010
  • heat is weightless (the physicist says massless). This can be
    22 KB (3,530 words) - 12:07, 10 November 2009
  • In 2001, the physicist Blaise Aguera y Arcas and
    25 KB (3,813 words) - 01:01, 21 May 2021
  • ...oni was briefly permitted to attend the classes of a University of Bologna physicist, Augusto Righi, who had been conducting research into high-frequency radio
    24 KB (3,676 words) - 01:47, 8 October 2013
  • ...oni was briefly permitted to attend the classes of a University of Bologna physicist, Augusto Righi, who had been conducting research into high-frequency radio
    24 KB (3,676 words) - 12:22, 6 September 2013
  • ...ject]], strenuously tried to stop the H-bomb project. He matched wits with physicist [[Edward Teller]], who insisted the H-bomb could and should be built. Telle
    45 KB (6,965 words) - 17:02, 22 March 2024
  • ...xioms that are intended to correspond to reality. In fact, the theoretical physicist, J. M. Ziman, proposed that science is ''public knowledge'' and thus includ
    30 KB (4,289 words) - 16:03, 20 January 2023
  • ...fically accurate until the 19th century, beginning with the work of German physicist [[Johann Scheibler]] in the 1830s. The unit [[hertz]] (Hz), replacing cycle
    32 KB (5,025 words) - 10:07, 28 February 2024
  • ...r is slowed down, which causes it to spread out. [[Albert Betz]], a German physicist, determined in 1919 (see [[Betz' law]]) that a wind turbine can extract at
    32 KB (5,126 words) - 19:24, 18 February 2024
  • In 2006, the notable physicist Dr. [[Bulent Atalay]] visited the school and gave a speech discussing topic
    34 KB (5,059 words) - 08:39, 22 April 2024
  • ...long before the technology made it possible. One early proponent was the physicist [[Leo Szilard]]: to help stem the flood of low-quality publications, he jok
    41 KB (6,197 words) - 05:41, 8 October 2013
  • ...ael Faraday''' (September 22, 1791 &ndash; August 25, 1867) was an English physicist and chemist who is one of the most influential scientists of all time.<ref>
    40 KB (6,455 words) - 08:20, 1 September 2013
  • ...ael Faraday''' (September 22, 1791 &ndash; August 25, 1867) was an English physicist and chemist who is one of the most influential scientists of all time.<ref>
    41 KB (6,564 words) - 08:21, 1 September 2013
  • In science, [[Robert Boyle]] was a seventeenth-century physicist who discovered [[Boyle's Law]]. [[Ernest Walton]] of [[Trinity College Dubl
    35 KB (5,225 words) - 08:30, 24 September 2023
  • ...February 7, 2009.</ref> [[Nobel laureate]] Dr. [[Steven Chu]], a [[physics|physicist]], was appointed [[U.S. Department of Energy|Energy Secretary]], heading up
    38 KB (5,883 words) - 16:13, 19 April 2024
  • ...om. Little Brown and Company. ISBN 0-7595-8324-2.</ref> renown theoretical physicist Lawrence M. Krauss<ref>http://krauss.faculty.asu.edu/bio.html Lawrence M. K
    51 KB (8,075 words) - 05:28, 17 October 2013
  • ...experimental conditions. In April 1976, Dr. H. Narasimhaiah, a [[physics|physicist]], [[rationalism|rationalist]] and then vice chancellor of [[Bangalore Univ
    50 KB (7,716 words) - 19:59, 1 November 2013
  • ...p the telephone.<ref name=Atwood/> A relatively famous example is that of physicist [[Richard Feynman]] who once recounted asking a librarian for a "map of the
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  • Between 1907 and 1917, the theoretical physicist [[Albert Einstein]] (1879-1955) developed the [[General theory of relativit
    60 KB (9,261 words) - 15:41, 23 September 2013
  • Between 1907 and 1917, the theoretical physicist [[Albert Einstein]] (1879-1955) developed the [[General theory of relativit
    64 KB (9,985 words) - 12:27, 24 March 2022
  • Some [[physicist]]s and science [[writers]] propose that extraterrestrial life may develop b ...ogist Harold Morowitz of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, and physicist Eric Smith of New Mexico's Santa Fe Institute, the geological environment "
    194 KB (28,649 words) - 05:43, 6 March 2024
  • ...ogist Harold Morowitz of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, and physicist Eric Smith of New Mexico's Santa Fe Institute, the geological environment " However, as physicist Philip Nelson writes: "The pleasure, the depth, the craft of our subject li
    150 KB (22,449 words) - 05:42, 6 March 2024
  • ...rs, and the Field Artillery.<blockquote>LT Charles B. Bazzoni, an American physicist who commanded Sound Ranging Section No. 1, complained that battery officers
    75 KB (10,990 words) - 12:11, 31 March 2024
  • Was [[Albert Einstein|Einstein]] mentally healthy? The famous [[physics|physicist]] was asked at one point to consider becoming [[prime minister]] of the sta
    84 KB (13,093 words) - 09:38, 22 February 2023
  • As articulated by the biologist-physicist team of David Sprinzak and Michael B. Elowitz,<ref>Sprinzak D, Elowitz MB (
    94 KB (13,588 words) - 18:21, 24 November 2013