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  1. Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen ( German pronunciation: [ˈhans ˈjɛnzn̩] ⓘ; 25 June 1907 – 11 February 1973) was a German nuclear physicist. During World War II, he worked on the German nuclear energy project, known as the Uranium Club, where he contributed to the separation of uranium isotopes.

  2. J. Hans D. Jensen (born June 25, 1907, Hamburg, Ger.—died Feb. 11, 1973, Heidelberg, W.Ger.) was a German physicist who shared half of the 1963 Nobel Prize for Physics with Maria Goeppert Mayer for their proposal of the shell nuclear model.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The theoretical formulation of the nuclear shell model, which Hans Jensen published in 1949 in collaboration with Haxel and Suess, and independently from Maria Goeppert-Mayer, offered the first coherent explanation for a variety of properties and structures of atomic nuclei.

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  5. Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen was a German nuclear physicist and a joint winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics. He was a member of the Uranium Club where he worked on the German nuclear energy project dring the World War II. His work on the separation of uranium isotopes is well-acknowledged.

  6. Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen was a German nuclear physicist. During World War II, he worked on the German nuclear energy project, known as the Uranium Club, where he contributed to the separation of uranium isotopes. After the war, Jensen was a professor at the University of Heidelberg.

  7. Born in Hamburg on June 25, 1907, J. Hans D. Jensen began studying physics, mathematics, physical chemistry and philosophy at the Universities of Hamburg and Freiburg. He obtained his PhD in 1932 in Hamburg, and became a scientific assistant at the Institute for Theoretical Physics of the University of Hamburg.

  8. Watch a video clip of the 1963 Nobel Laureate in Physics, J. Hans D. Jensen, receiving his Nobel Prize medal and diploma during the Nobel Prize Award Ceremony at the Concert Hall in Stockholm, Sweden, on 10 December 1963.