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         Bardeen John:     more books (81)
  1. John Locke (Pedagogical biography) by Robert Hebert Quick, 1886
  2. Ball's FORM STUDY AND DRAWING 1,000 Questions and Answers in; Including by John Warren, Illustrated Ball, 1892
  3. Nutting genealogy. A record of some of the descendants of John Nutting, of Groton, Mass
  4. John Amos Comenius by S. S. Laurie, 1892
  5. The Orbis pictus of John Amos Comenius
  6. Normal language lessons (School bulletin publications) by Samuel John Sornberger, 1888
  7. John Amos Comenius (Pedagogical biography, no. II) by Robert Hebert Quick, 1886
  8. Orbis Pictus of John Amos Comenius by ComeniusJohnAmos, 1887
  9. John Amos Comenius, bishop of the Moravians,: His life and educational works, by Simon Somerville Laurie, 1892
  10. The Orbis pictus of John Amos Comenius. by Comenius. Johann Amos. 1592-1670., 1887-01-01
  11. Specimen pages of the Orbis pictus of John Amos Comenius by Johann Amos Comenius, 1887
  12. The philosophy of school discipline: A paper read before the meeting of the New York State Teachers' Association, July 25, 1877 by John Kennedy, 1877
  13. A Socratic study of plane geometry, by John James Quinn, 1904
  14. The limits of oral training, (Schoolroom classics) by John W Dickinson, 1890

81. Rare Books And First Editions: The Invention Of The Transistor
The first announcement of the invention bardeen, john, and Brattain, William. Thefirst technical description bardeen, john, and BRATTAIN, William.
http://www.theworldsgreatbooks.com/transistor.htm
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email: info@manhattanrarebooks.com home current offerings sell/consign contact us please call to request a printed catalog Often considered the most important invention of the twentieth century:
The transistor
the four publications in original wrappers that first announced and
described the device that made the information age possible The first announcement of the invention: The first technical description: please click to enlarge BARDEEN, John, and Brattain, William. "The Transistor, a Semi-conductor Triode." AND: "Nature of the Forward Current in Germanium Point Contacts." AND: SHOCKLEY, William, and PEARSON, Gerald. "Modulation of Conductance of Thin Films of Semi-Conductors by Surface Charges." In Physical Review , Vol. 74, Second Series, July 15, 1948 (pp. 230-233). (Lancaster, PA): American Physical Society, 1948. Original wrappers.

82. Carte Du Ciel Et Planètes Pour John BARDEEN
Translate this page Astrologie thème astral des célébrités, Carte du ciel et positions planétairesde john bardeen, né le 23 mai 1908 à 05h00 à Madison (WI) (Etats-Unis).
http://www.astrotheme.fr/portraits/5FN5rN2GW3E8.htm
L'Astrologie NEWS ** Webmasters / Services *** Marque Blanche *** ... Espace Membres Identifiant Mot de passe Mot de passe perdu ? Astrologie : thème astral des célébrités Carte du ciel et positions planétaires de John BARDEEN,
né le 23 mai 1908 à 05h00 à Madison (WI) (Etats-Unis) Gémeaux 1°53 AS Gémeaux 10°03 John BARDEEN Positions des planètes Soleil Gémeaux Lune Poissons Mercure Gémeaux Vénus Cancer Mars Cancer Jupiter Lion Saturne Bélier Uranus Capricorne Neptune Cancer Pluton Gémeaux Chiron Verseau Cérès Balance Pallas Vierge Junon Capricorne Vesta Cancer Noeud Nord Cancer Lilith Lion Fortune Poissons AS Gémeaux MC Verseau Positions des maisons Maison 1 Gémeaux Maison 2 Cancer Maison 3 Cancer Maison 4 Lion Maison 5 Vierge Maison 6 Balance Maison 7 Sagittaire Maison 8 Capricorne Maison 9 Capricorne Maison 10 Verseau Maison 11 Poissons Maison 12 Bélier Liste des aspects Vénus Conjonction Neptune Orbe Mercure Conjonction Pluton Orbe Mars Conjonction Pluton Orbe Soleil Conjonction AS Orbe Mercure Conjonction AS Orbe Vénus Opposition Uranus Orbe Uranus Opposition Neptune Orbe Jupiter Opposition MC Orbe Lune Carré AS Orbe Saturne Carré Neptune Orbe Soleil Carré Lune Orbe Vénus Carré Saturne Orbe Mars Carré Saturne Orbe Jupiter Trigone Saturne Orbe Mercure Trigone MC Orbe Lune Trigone Neptune Orbe Lune Trigone Vénus Orbe Lune Trigone Mars Orbe Jupiter Sextile AS Orbe Saturne Sextile AS Orbe Soleil Sextile Saturne Orbe Lune Quinconce Jupiter Orbe Vénus Quinconce MC Orbe Neptune Quinconce MC Orbe Jupiter SemiCarré Pluton Orbe Soleil SesquiCarré Uranus Orbe Mars SesquiCarré MC Orbe Mercure Quintile Saturne Orbe Uranus BiQuintile AS Orbe Lune SemiSextile Saturne Orbe Soleil SemiSextile

83. John Bardeen
About john bardeen Born Madison, Wisconsin, May 23, 1908. Stepmother, Mrs. KenelmMcCauley, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. john bardeen married Jane Maxwell, 1938.
http://www.smecc.org/john_bardeen.htm
John Bardeen
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Up SMEC Memorial - Bardeen missing text
With permission, Bell Laboratories RECORD
Dr.'s Bardeen, Brattain, And Shockley
missing image The Invention Of The Transistor As Reported By Dr. John Bardeen
THE EARLY DAYS OF THE TRANSISTOR, 1946 TO 1951. By Professor John Bardeen
The following article is based upon a talk given by Professor John Bardeen at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign student branch of the IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) on February 28, 1979, in Altgeld Hall. The hall was filled to overflowing, with many turned away! The program introduction was by Mr. Paul Bates, president of the IEEE student branch, and speaker introduction was by Professor Edward C. Jordan, retiring head of the Department of Electrical Engineering. We, at the Southwest Museum of Electricity and Communication, present to you a transcript of this lecture. Since it is always our policy to introduce you to the people that made an innovation, we invited John Bardeen to provide you with the real facts, as they happened then! Much thanks are extended to Dr. Bardeen and the University of Illinois Loomis Lab for providing us with this 'never before published in an English language journal' account of the first days in the transistor development process! THE EARLY DAYS OF THE TRANSISTOR The point-contact transistor, the first bipolar transistor, was discovered in a program of basic research on solid state physics initiated at the Bell Telephone Laboratories just after World War II. The program was due in large part to M. J. Kelly, who was director of research and later president of the Bell Laboratories. He felt that one could improve the properties of materials from an understanding of their electronic and atomic structure brought about by application of quantum mechanics. The group formed to work on the program included physicists and chemists as well as theorists with an understanding of the quantum theory of solids. The basis for a theoretical understanding of solids had been developed in the late twenties and thirties but generally there was a wide gap between theory and experiment.

84. John Bardeen
BOOKS john bardeen, Superconductivity, And Edwin Hall’s UnansweredQuestions by Laurence Hecht True Genius The Life and Science
http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/summ02/Bardeen.html
BOOKS
by Laurence Hecht
True Genius: The Life and Science of John Bardeen
by Lillian Hoddeson and Vicki Daitch
Washington, D.C.: Joseph Henry Press, 2002
Hardcover, 480 pages, $27.95
The team of Brattain, Bardeen and Shockley at Bell Labs during the development of the transistor. Brattain (left) is at the apparatus, while Bardeen (right) enters data into their notebook, and Shockley looks on. The Transistor and Shockley
Thus, in my view, the very strength of the book, its detailed portrayal of how modern physics is done, is also its shortcoming. For in the end, there is a lack of beauty to the final result that no amount of writing and research skill can overcome. If one accepts the popular premise that the award of a Nobel Prize is the unfailing measure of true genius, I suppose the case for Bardeen is open and shut, twice. If one questions such assertions, and prefers a universal standard of truth, then the currently faddish preoccupation of historians of science to arrive at a definition of genius by sociological means appears a silly spectacle. I suspect that feeling may even be shared by many among those who have become the subject of such academic games, be they living or dead. I would like to think the ever modest Dr. Bardeen might even agree with me on that score.
Shortly after completing the above review, a photocopy of a 1933 paper by Edwin H. Hall on the subject of superconductivity

85. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
john bardeen; WON NOBEL PRIZE AS COINVENTOR OF THE TRANSISTOR. Author AssociatedPress Date Thursday, January 31, 1991 Page 37 Section OBITUARY.
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1991/1991ae.html

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JOHN BARDEEN; WON NOBEL PRIZE AS CO-INVENTOR OF THE TRANSISTOR
Author: Associated Press Date: Thursday, January 31, 1991
Page:
Section:
OBITUARY John Bardeen, a two-time Nobel Prize winner who helped develop transistors, the building blocks of modern electronics, died here yesterday after suffering cardiac arrest. He was 82. Mr. Bardeen, professor emeritus of electrical engineering and physics at the University of Illinois, died at Brigham and Women's Hospital, where he underwent exploratory surgery Tuesday that revealed he had lung cancer. He came through the surgery well and "was laughing and joking with nurses and orderlies this morning," when he was suddenly stricken, said Catherine Foster, a spokeswoman for the University of Illinois in Champaign. Mr. Bardeen's wife, Jane, was with him. Mr. Bardeen won the Nobel prize in 1956 as co-inventor of the transistor, and again in 1972 as co-developer of the theory of superconductivity at low temperatures. Electronics relied on the bulky and inefficient vacuum tube until Mr. Bardeen and two colleagues Walter Brattain and William Shockley developed the transistor in the late 1940s while working at Bell Laboratories.

86. Nat'l Academies Press, Memorial Tributes: (1993), John Bardeen
OCR for page 3 john bardeen 1 9081 991 BY NICK HOLONYAK, JR. Except for hisPh.D., all of john bardeen s formal education occurred in Wisconsin.
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309048478/html/2.html
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Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-iv Contents, pp. v-xii Title Page, pp. 1-1 John Bardeen, pp. 2-11 Harry F. Barr, pp. 12-17 Gilbert Y. Chin, pp. 18-21 James Wallace Daily, pp. 22-25 John Frank Elliot, pp. 26-29 Karl L. Fetters, pp. 30-33 James C. Fletcher, pp. 34-39 Jacob M. Geist, pp. 40-45 Milton Harris, pp. 46-49 Fred L. Hartley, pp. 50-55 Richard Hazen, pp. 56-61 Edward H. Heinemann, pp. 62-65 Frederic A. Holloway, pp. 66-71 Marshall G. Holloway, pp. 72-77 Grace Murray Hopper, pp. 78-83 Richard Ralson Hough, pp. 84-87 Robert I. Jaffee, pp. 88-91 Clarence L. Johnson, pp. 92-95 Edward Conrad Jordan, pp. 96-101 John Fisher Kennedy, pp. 102-109 Augustus B. Kinzel, pp. 110-113 Philip S. Klebanoff, pp. 114-117

87. New Page 1
39 Union Street New Brunswick, NJ USA 089018538 +1-732-932-1066 (Office) +1-732-932-1193(Fax) history@ieee.org. IEEE History Center. john bardeen 1908 - 1991.
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IEEE History Center John Bardeen
Dr. John Bardeen
, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Physics of the University of Illinois, had a profound influence on the technical and scientific life of his time. With Walter Brattain and William Shockley he was co-inventor of the transistor, an invention which has changed dramatically the course of modern electronic technology. In 1957 he collaborated with L. N. Cooper and J. R. Schrieffer in the development of the microscopic theory of superconductivity, his outstanding contribution to contemporary physics. This theory is now recognized as providing a correct account of superconductivity in solids, a phenomenon first discovered by Kammerlingh-Onnes in 1911, nearly fifty years earlier. Bardeen was born in Madison, Wisconsin, on 23 May 1908, the son of Dr. Charles R. and Althea Harmer Bardeen. His father was professor of anatomy and dean of the University of Wisconsin Medical School at Madison. Bardeen received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Wisconsin in 1928 and 1929.

88. Learn More About John Bardeen In The Online Encyclopedia.
Visit the Online Encyclopedia and learn more and get your questions answered aboutjohn bardeen. You are here Online Encyclopedia john bardeen. john bardeen.
http://www.onlineencyclopedia.org/j/jo/john_bardeen.html
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John Bardeen
John Bardeen May 23 January 30 ) was a physicist who was the co- inventor of the transistor . He developed a fundamental theory for conventional superconductivity together with Cooper and Schrieffer; today known as the BCS theory He was born in Madison, Wisconsin , and received his Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Wisconsin in Bardeen studied Physics as a graduate student at Princeton , with Nobel Laureate Eugene Wigner . He received his PhD from Princeton in In 1956, Bardeen received the Nobel Prize in physics for the transistor . Amazingly, he received it again in 1972 for the BCS theory . No other physicist has received it twice. Bardeen was also an important advisor to the Xerox Corporation . Though quiet by nature, he took the rare step of urging Xerox executives to keep their California research center

89. AllRefer Encyclopedia - John Bardeen (Physics, Biographies) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon john bardeen, Physics, Biographies. john bardeen, Physics, Biographies.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/B/Bardeen.html
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Related Category: Physics, Biographies John Bardeen [bArd E Pronunciation Key superconductivity , becoming the first person to win a Nobel Prize twice in the same field.
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  • 90. Encyclopedia: John Bardeen
    Updated Apr 24, 2004. Encyclopedia john bardeen. john bardeen (May 23, 1908 January 30, 1991) was a physicist who was the co-inventor of the transistor.
    http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/John-Bardeen

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    Encyclopedia : John Bardeen
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    John Bardeen May 23 January 30 ) was a physicist who was the co-inventor of the transistor. He developed a fundamental theory for conventional superconductivity together with Cooper and Schrieffer; today known as the BCS theory
    He was born in Madison, Wisconsin

    91. American Scientist Online - John Who?
    BIOGRAPHY. john Who? True Genius The Life and Science of john bardeen. LillianHoddeson and Vicki Daitch. xii + 467 pp. Joseph Henry Press, 2002. $27.95.
    http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/17188
    Home Current Issue Archives Bookshelf ... Subscribe In This Section Reviewed in This Issue Book Reviews by Issue New Books Received Publishers' Directory ... Virtual Bookshelf Archive Site Search Advanced Search Visitor Login Username Password Help with login Forgot your password? Change your username see list of all reviews from this issue: March-April 2003
    BIOGRAPHY
    John Who?
    True Genius: The Life and Science of John Bardeen . Lillian Hoddeson and Vicki Daitch. xii + 467 pp. Joseph Henry Press, 2002. $27.95. True Genius Crystal Fire Bardeen was born in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1908 to progressive parents who had a strong devotion to education: His father was founder and first dean of the University of Wisconsin Medical School, and his mother had once taught at John Dewey's experimental Laboratory School of the University of Chicago. Together they nurtured John's emerging mathematical talents. In spite of the tragic loss of his mother at age 11, Bardeen completed his high school curriculum at 13 and became a "college man" two years later. He attended the University of Wisconsin, studying with some of the preeminent men of science of that generation—John Van Vleck, Peter Debye, Werner Heisenberg and Paul Dirac (who all became Nobel laureates), as well as Warren Weaver and Arnold Sommerfeld. It took Bardeen five years to graduate, because he had difficulty choosing an area of concentration (oscillating between physics, engineering and mathematics) and spent a semester working at Western Electric Company. He got a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering in 1928.

    92. International John Bardeen Award
    International john bardeen Award. AA Abrikosov 1991. ANL Research Facilities Divisions Materials Science Division About
    http://www.msd.anl.gov/awards/ijba.html
    International John Bardeen Award
    • A. A. Abrikosov - 1991
    ANL Divisions Materials Science Division About MSD ... Search Send questions and comments to the Web Designer security/privacy notice Page Last Modified: May 30, 2004

    93. Nobel Prize In Physics 1956
    AA Bell Telephone Laboratories (Bell Labs), Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA WA - BellTelephone Laboratories (Bell Labs) Additional Information john bardeen 1/3
    http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel/nobel1956.html
    Home About Contact
    "for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect"
    William Shockley
    1/3 of prize
    USA
    born 1910, (London, England), died 1989
    CA - Stanford University , Stanford, California, USA
    AA - Bell Telephone Laboratories ( Bell Labs ), Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA
    WA - Bell Telephone Laboratories ( Bell Labs
    Additional Information
    John Bardeen
    1/3 of prize
    USA
    born 1908, died 1991
    CA - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , Urbana, Illinois, USA
    AA - Bell Telephone Laboratories ( Bell Labs ), Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA WA - Bell Telephone Laboratories ( Bell Labs Additional Information
    Walter Houser Brattain
    1/3 of prize USA born 1902 (Amoy, China), died 1987 CA - Whitman College , Walla Walla, Washington, USA AA - Bell Telephone Laboratories ( Bell Labs ), Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA WA - Bell Telephone Laboratories ( Bell Labs Additional Information
    Additional Information: William Shockley:

    94. History Of The Transistor
    Tiny but powerful the transistor changed the future of electronics john Bardeenand Walter Brattain and William Shockley co-invented the transistor at Bell
    http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/bltransistor.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Inventors Home ... Industrial Revolution zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Famous Inventions Famous Inventors Black Inventors Women Inventors ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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    Subscribe to the About Inventors newsletter. Search Inventors History of the Transistor A device composed of semiconductor material that amplifies a signal or opens or closes a circuit, transistors have become the major componet in all digital circuits, including computer microprocessors which now contain millions of microscopic size transistors. Prior to transistors, digital circuits used vacuum tubes which had many disadvantages, they were larger, used more energy, and created more heat. Our Featured Story
    The History of The Transistor

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    95. INVENT NOW - The Page Has Moved
    National Inventors Hall of Fame We have redesigned our site and the page you requested,http//www.invent.org80/book/booktext/5.html, is no longer available.
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    96. National Academy Of Sciences - Deceased Member
    National Academy of Sciences.
    http://www4.nationalacademies.org/nas/nasdece.nsf/(urllinks)/NAS-58MUVV?opendocu

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