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  1. In Colorado, where he rejoined his friends Gamow, Richtmyer, and Hawkins, Ulam's research interests turned toward biology. In 1968, recognizing this emphasis, the University of Colorado School of Medicine appointed Ulam as Professor of Biomathematics, and he held this position until his death.

  2. May 9, 2024 · Stanislaw Ulam (born April 13, 1909, Lemberg, Poland, Austrian Empire [now Lviv, Ukraine]—died May 13, 1984, Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S.) was a Polish-born American mathematician who played a major role in the development of the hydrogen bomb at Los Alamos, New Mexico, U.S.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. One morning in 1946, in Los Angeles, Stanisław Ulam, a newly appointed professor at the University of Southern California, awoke to find himself unable to speak. A few hours later, he underwent a dangerous surgical operation after the diagnosis of encephalitis. ...

  4. American. Polish. Biography: Stanislaw Ulam was a Polish-American scientist best known for his involvement in the Manhattan Project and his development, alongside Edward Teller, of the Teller-Ulam design for a thermonuclear weapon.

  5. May 3, 2018 · Stanislaw Ulam, born in Poland in 1909, was a key member of the remarkable Lvov School of Mathematics, which flourished in that city between the two world wars. Ulam studied mathematics at the Lvov Polytechnic Institute, getting his PhD in 1933.

  6. Prodigiously talented with a remarkable flair for anticipating correct results and initiating fruitful areas of research, Stanislaw Ulam (‘Stan’ to his friends) was an unusual mathematician.

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  8. Friends also suspected a change in his personality (which his wife later repeatedly denied). Nevertheless, those responsible for secrecy at Los Alamos were concerned that he might reveal research secrets due to illness.

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