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  1. Sir John Douglas Cockcroft OM KCB CBE FRS (27 May 1897 – 18 September 1967) was a British physicist who shared with Ernest Walton the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1951 for splitting the atomic nucleus, and was instrumental in the development of nuclear power.

  2. particle accelerator. Sir John Douglas Cockcroft (born May 27, 1897, Todmorden, Yorkshire, Eng.—died Sept. 18, 1967, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) was a British physicist, joint winner, with Ernest T.S. Walton of Ireland, of the 1951 Nobel Prize for Physics for pioneering the use of particle accelerators in studying the atomic nucleus.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Lived 1897 – 1967. John Cockcroft won the 1951 Nobel Prize in Physics with his colleague Ernest Walton for producing the first artificial nuclear disintegration in history. Cockcroft & Walton designed and built the first 'high energy' particle accelerator.

  4. Sep 22, 2017 · Sir John Cockcroft was one of the most important and influential scientists of the modern era. He was the joint winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics (1951) for his pioneering work at the Cavendish Revealing the personal side of the atomic scientist who changed the world | University of Cambridge

  5. Nov 20, 2007 · Cockcroft’s subatomic legacy: splitting the atom. 20 November 2007. Looking back 75 years to the first accelerator-based physics experiment. In April 1932 John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton split the atom for the first time, at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge in the UK. Only weeks earlier, James Chadwick, also in Cambridge, discovered the ...

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  6. Sir John Cockcroft – the man behind the science. The life and legacy of Sir John Cockcroft, the great physicist who was famously involved in the so-called “splitting” of the atom, will be celebrated in a seminar at St John’s College, Cambridge next month.

  7. Jun 17, 2020 · Winner, alongside Ernest Walton, of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1951 – for pioneering the use of particle accelerators in the study of the atomic nucleus – Sir John Douglas Cockcroft was a renowned British physicist who was instrumental in the development of nuclear power.

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