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  1. At age 15, Bardeen was accepted into the engineering program at the University of Wisconsin, where he studied mathematics and physics in addition to his engineering coursework. In 1928, he earned an M.S. in electrical engineering in addition to a bachelor’s degree. Bardeen stayed on at the University of Wisconsin as a research assistant for ...

  2. Today, there are trillions of transistors on Earth and billions in space. Bell Labs scientists John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley won the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics for their invention of the transistor, a small semiconductor device that would change the world. Today, there are transistors in every place where an electronic ...

  3. John Bardeen was an eminent American physicist, who won the Nobel Prize twice. In 1956, with fellow scientists William B. Shockley and Walter H. Brattain, Bardeen shared the award for the invention of the transistor. He received the award for the second time in 1972, with Leon N. Cooper and John R. Schrieffer, for formulating

  4. John Bardeen, Ph.D. (Princeton Univ., 1936) The Nobel Prize in Physics 1956 was awarded jointly to William Bradford Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Houser Brattain "for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect". The Nobel Prize in Physics 1972 was awarded jointly to John Bardeen, Leon Neil Cooper and ...

  5. In 1933, he returned to graduate studies in mathematical physics at Princeton University, where he had his first introduction to solid state theory, and received his Ph.D. in 1936. Dr. Bardeen spent several years engaged in research at Harvard University, the University of Minnesota, and the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in Washington, D.C.

  6. John Bardeen was born in Madison, Wisconsin on May 23, 1908. His father, Charles Russell Bardeen, was the first graduate of the Johns Hopkins Medical School and founder of the Medical School at the University of Wisconsin. His mother, Althea Harmer, studied oriental art at the Pratt Institute and practiced interior design in Chicago. He.

  7. Jan 31, 1991 · John Bardeen, a co-inventor of the transistor that led to modern electronics and twice a winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics, died yesterday at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. He was 82 ...

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