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  1. University of Bristol. Doctoral advisor. R.H. Fowler. Sir Nevill Francis Mott CH FRS (30 September 1905 – 8 August 1996) was a British physicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1977 for his work on the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems, especially amorphous semiconductors.

  2. Mar 28, 2024 · Sir Nevill F. Mott was an English physicist who shared (with P.W. Anderson and J.H. Van Vleck of the United States) the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1977 for his independent researches on the magnetic and electrical properties of noncrystalline, or amorphous, semiconductors.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. by Roberto Lalli. Sir Nevill Francis Mott (1905-1996) Nobel Prize in Physics 1977 together with Philip W. Anderson and John H. van Vleck "for their fundamental theoretical investigations of the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems".

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  5. Aug 10, 1996 · Sir Nevill Francis Mott, a British physicist whose spadework for a new branch of solid-state physics was crowned with a Nobel Prize, died on Thursday at a hospital in Milton Keynes, England....

  6. Sir Nevill F. Mott won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1977, alongside Philip W. Anderson and John H. Van Vleck, "for their fundamental theoretical investigations of the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems." Additionally, his work at the University of Bristol and Cambridge University advanced the field of physics.

  7. Sir Nevill Francis Mott (1905-1996), theoretical physicist. Nevill Francis Mott was born in Leeds on 30 September 1905. His father, Charles Francis Mott, who later became Director of Education of Liverpool, and his mother, Lillian Mary Mott née Reynolds, had been research students together under J.J. Thomson at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge.

  8. Nevill Mott was a theoretical physicist - a label far too narrow and restrictive to describe his output and methods of working. His principal posts were at Bristol and Cambridge but he was the “father” of a much larger community, communicating (without the benefit of e- mail) with hundreds of scientists, theoreticians and experimentalists ...

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