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  1. The Register of Leo Szilard Papers 1898 – 1998; Einstein ajánlólevele Rooseveltnek Szilárd Leóról Archiválva 2014. október 5-i dátummal a Wayback Machine-ben; Marx György: Szilárd Leó; Akadémiai, Bp., 1997 (A múlt magyar tudósai) William Lanouette: Szilárd Leó. Zseni árnyékban; ford. Hraskó Péter, előszó Jonas Salk ...

  2. Born Leo Spitz in Budapest, Hungary in 1898, Szilard received his PhD in Physics at the University of Berlin in 1922, becoming close friends with Albert Einstein during this time. In 1933, during the rise of Nazi Germany, Szilard moved to England to study nuclear chain reactions.

  3. Leo Szilard was born in Budapest, Hungary, on February 11, 1898. Due to racial quotas, he had to go to the Institute of Technology in Berlin due to racial quotas, where he met several brilliant physicists such as Albert Einstein and Max Planck. Szilard earned his doctorate in physics in 1922. He and Einstein became close friends.

  4. Leó Szilárd (nascido Leo Spitz; Budapeste, 11 de fevereiro de 1898 — La Jolla, 30 de maio de 1964) foi um físico nuclear húngaro naturalizado americano . Notabilizado por seus trabalhos em fissão nuclear controlada, estudou no Instituto de Tecnologia de Budapeste e na Universidade de Berlim, na qual obteve o seu PhD (1922) e lecionou ...

  5. Feb 12, 2013 · Part of the group of brilliant Hungarian "Martians" - scientists whose intellects and achievements were considered off-the-charts - Szilard was the most perspicacious in anticipating world events ...

  6. May 14, 2018 · Leo Szilard. The Hungarian-American physicist—and later molecular biologist—Leo Szilard (1898-1964) helped initiate the atomic age and later worked for nuclear disarmament and world peace. Leo Szilard was born in Budapest, Hungary, on February 11, 1898, the oldest of three children. His father was an engineer.

  7. About Leo Szilárd. A Hungarian physicist, he was best known for encouraging Albert Einstein to warn President Roosevelt about the atomic bomb. He later worked with Enrico Fermi to construct the first nuclear reactor. He circulated petitions among the scientists demanding greater scientific input on the future use of atomic weapons.

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