Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Nine years older than Bardeen, â Vanâ brought modern quantum physics to the University of Wisconsin when he came to teach there in the fall of 1928. â The University was strong in applied math- ematics,â Bardeen recalled, â but there was little interest in atomic physics until Van Vleck arrived.â Like Bardeen, John Van Vleck grew up in ...

  2. Believing that there was no fundamental distinction between pure and applied science, Bardeen was a theoretical physicist who since the beginning of his career focused on the application of quantum mechanics to solid-state physics. In this field, Bardeen made several major contributions, but he is especially remembered for the achievements that ...

  3. John Bardeen (May 23, 1908-Jan 30, 1991) was an American physicist who was cowinner of the Nobel Prize for physics in 1956 and 1972 . The 1956 Nobel Prize was for the joint invention of the transistor with William B. Shockley and Walter H. Brattain.

  4. John Bardeen was the first person to have been awarded two Nobel Prizes in the same field. He shared one with William Shockley and Walter Brattain for the invention of the transistor. But it was the charismatic Shockley who garnered all the attention, primarily for his Hollywood ways and notorious views on race and intelligence.

  5. John Bardeen was an established force in physics when he joined the University of Illinois faculty in 1951. While working at Bell Telephone Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, he became interested in semiconductors and with W. H. Brattain discovered the transistor effect in late 1947. At Illinois, Bardeen established two major research ...

  6. May 23, 2017 · On May 23, 1908, American physicist and electrical engineer John Bardeen was born. Bardeen is the only person to have won the Nobel Prize in Physics twice: first in 1956 with William Shockley and Walter Brattain for the invention of the transistor;[] and again in 1972 with Leon N Cooper and John Robert Schrieffer for a fundamental theory of conventional superconductivity known as the BCS ...

  7. Aug 7, 2019 · He started college at the University of Wisconsin, where he earned both his bachelor's and master’s degrees in electrical engineering, in 1928 and 1929. For three years, Bardeen worked as a geophysicist at Gulf Research Laboratories, in Pittsburgh. In 1936, he earned a doctorate in mathematical physics at Princeton University.

  1. People also search for