HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results registered every hour. And the light emitted is so 10. cherenkov, pavel ALEKSEYEVICHThe Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition; January 10, 2004 http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru
SCIENCE Denne effekten ble første gang oppdaget i 1934 av pavel Alekseyevichcherenkov. I 1958 fikk cherenkov Nobelprisen for denne oppdagelsen. http://www.science.no/nyhet.php?page=590
Physics 1958 for the discovery and the interpretation of the cherenkov effect . PavelAlekseyevich cherenkov, Il´ja Mikhailovich Frank, Igor Yevgenyevich Tamm. http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1958/
Cherenkov Radiation encyclopediaEncyclopedia cherenkov radiation. cherenkov Related contentfrom HighBeam Research on cherenkov radiation. cherenkov http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/sci/A0811680.html
Extractions: Cherenkov radiation Cherenkov radiation or Cerenkov radiation [for P. A. Cherenkov ], light emitted by a transparent medium when charged particles pass through it at a speed greater than the speed of light in the medium. The effect, discovered by Cherenkov in 1934 while he was studying the effects of gamma rays on liquids and explained in 1937 by I. E. Tamm and I. M. Frank, is analogous to the creation of a sonic boom when an object exceeds the speed of sound in a medium. The light is emitted only in directions inclined at a certain angle to the direction of the particles' motion dependent upon the particles' momentum. Thus, by simply measuring the angle between the radiation and the path of the particles, the particles' speed may be determined. The effect is used in the Cherenkov counter, a device for detecting fast particles and determining their speeds or distinguishing between particles of different speeds. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia
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AllRefer Encyclopedia - Cherenkov Radiation (Physics) - Encyclopedia cherenkov radiation, Physics. Related Category Physics. More articles fromAllRefer Reference on cherenkov radiation. Click Here. Encyclopedia 4U.com. http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/C/Cherenk-rad.html
Extractions: By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z C Related Category: Physics Cherenkov radiation or Cerenkov radiation [for P. A. Cherenkov ], light emitted by a transparent medium when charged particles pass through it at a speed greater than the speed of light in the medium. The effect, discovered by Cherenkov in 1934 while he was studying the effects of gamma rays on liquids and explained in 1937 by I. E. Tamm and I. M. Frank, is analogous to the creation of a sonic boom when an object exceeds the speed of sound in a medium. The light is emitted only in directions inclined at a certain angle to the direction of the particles' motion dependent upon the particles' momentum. Thus, by simply measuring the angle between the radiation and the path of the particles, the particles' speed may be determined. The effect is used in the Cherenkov counter, a device for detecting fast particles and determining their speeds or distinguishing between particles of different speeds.
January 6 - Today In Science History electric battery, and Roentgen, discoverer of the X ray. pavel AlekseyevichCherenkov. (source), Died 6 Jan 1990 (born 15 Jul 1904 http://www.todayinsci.com/1/1_06.htm
Extractions: Swiss immunologist and pathologist who received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1996 because of his relatively early work with colleague Peter Doherty defining the system by which the immune system identifies friend and foe. His work since then has built upon this discovery, revealing how the thymus gland selects only white blood cells that react properly to virus-infected cells and investigating the complex interplay by which viruses and their hosts co-evolve. Zinkernagel has also been a vocal proponent of the promise of biotechnology in his native Switzerland. George Ledyard Stebbins
July 15 - Today In Science History Gavin Maxwell. Born 15 Jul 1914 Scottish author and naturalist. pavel AlekseyevichCherenkov. (source), Born 15 Jul 1904 (Old Style); died 6 Jan 1990. http://www.todayinsci.com/7/7_15.htm
Extractions: American microbiologist who recognized the existance of the organisms Archaea as a third domain of life, distinct from the previously recognized two domains of bacteria, and life other than bacteria. On 2 Nov 1977, his identification of methanogens, a form of life dating back some 3.5 billion years, was reported from the University of Illinois. Woese had long studied the evolutionary track of DNA and RNA. In 1976, he was approached by his colleague Ralph Wolfe, who presented a group of methane producing organisms. Woese studied their RNA and recognized their lack of the entire oligonucleotide sequences. Methanogens are found in oxygen-deficient environments, and mostly obtain their energy by reducing CO and oxidizing hydrogen, and releasing methane. Leon Max Lederman American physicist who, along with Melvin Schwartz and Jack Steinberger, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in1988 for their joint research and discovery (1960-62) of a new subatomic particle, the muon neutrino. Neutrinos are subatomic particles that have no detectable mass and no electric charge, that travel at the speed of light. The discovery of muon neutrinos, a new type of neutrino, was followed by discoveries by other scientists of a number of different "families" of subatomic particle. Together, they now form a standard model, a scheme that has been used to classify all known elementary particles. He was director of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Ill. (1979-89).
Cherenkov Radiation encyclopediaEncyclopedia cherenkov radiation. cherenkov radiation or Cerenkovradiationfor PA cherenkov, light emitted by a transparent http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/sci/A0811680.html
Extractions: Cherenkov radiation Cherenkov radiation or Cerenkov radiation [for P. A. Cherenkov ], light emitted by a transparent medium when charged particles pass through it at a speed greater than the speed of light in the medium. The effect, discovered by Cherenkov in 1934 while he was studying the effects of gamma rays on liquids and explained in 1937 by I. E. Tamm and I. M. Frank, is analogous to the creation of a sonic boom when an object exceeds the speed of sound in a medium. The light is emitted only in directions inclined at a certain angle to the direction of the particles' motion dependent upon the particles' momentum. Thus, by simply measuring the angle between the radiation and the path of the particles, the particles' speed may be determined. The effect is used in the Cherenkov counter, a device for detecting fast particles and determining their speeds or distinguishing between particles of different speeds. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia,
List Of Physicists 18671934); Fritjof Capra - Austria, USA (1939- ); pavel AlekseyevichCherenkov - Imperial Russia, Soviet union (1904-1990); Paul Adrien http://www.fact-index.com/l/li/list_of_physicists.html
Extractions: PHYSICS Alphabetical listing of Nobel prize laureates in Physics Name Year Awarded Alfven, Hannes Alvarez, Luis W. Anderson, Carl David Anderson, Philip W. Appleton, Sir Edward Victor Bardeen, John Bardeen, John Barkla, Charles Glover Basov, Nicolay Gennadiyevich Becquerel, Antoine Henri Bednorz, J. Georg Bethe, Hans Albrecht Binnig, Gerd Blackett, Lord Patrick Maynard Stuart Bloch, Felix Bloembergen, Nicolaas Bohr, Aage Bohr, Niels Born, Max Bothe, Walther Bragg, Sir William Henry Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Brattain, Walter Houser Braun, Carl Ferdinand Bridgman, Percy Williams Brockhouse, Bertram N. Chadwick, Sir James Chamberlain, Owen Chandrasekhar, Subramanyan Charpak, Georges Cherenkov, Pavel Alekseyevich Chu, Steven Cockcroft, Sir John Douglas Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude Compton, Arthur Holly Cooper, Leon N. Curie, Marie Curie, Pierre Dalen, Nils Gustaf Davisson, Clinton Joseph De Broglie, Prince Louis-Victor De Gennes, Pierre-Gilles Dehmelt, Hans G.
Nobel For Physics: All Laureates Donald Arthur Glaser 1959 Emilio Gino Segrè, Owen Chamberlain 1958 pavel AlekseyevichCherenkov, Il´ja Mikhailovich Frank, Igor Yergenyevich Tamm 1957 Chen http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/phy-list.html
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Nobel Prize In Physics Since 1901 1959. Chamberlain, Owen; Segre, Emilio Gino. 1960. Glaser, Donald A. 1961. http://www.planet101.com/nobel_physics_hist.htm
Extractions: Nobel Prize in Physics since 1901 Year Winners Roentgen, Wilhelm Conrad Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon Zeeman, Pieter Becquerel, Antoine Henri; Curie, Marie; Curie, Pierre Rayleigh, Lord John William Strutt Lenard, Philipp Eduard Anton Thomson, Sir Joseph John Michelson, Albert Abraham Lippmann, Gabriel Braun, Carl Ferdinand Marconi, Guglielmo Van Der Waals, Johannes Diderik Wien, Wilhelm Dalen, Nils Gustaf Kamerlingh-Onnes, Heike Laue, Max Von Bragg, Sir William Henry; Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Barkla, Charles Glover Planck, Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Stark, Johannes Guillaume, Charles Edouard Einstein, Albert Bohr, Niels Millikan, Robert Andrews Siegbahn, Karl Manne Georg Franck, James; Hertz, Gustav Perrin, Jean Baptiste Compton, Arthur Holly; Wilson, Charles Thomson Rees Richardson, Sir Owen Willans De Broglie, Prince Louis-Victor Raman, Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Heisenberg, Werner Dirac, Paul Adrien Maurice; Schroedinger, Erwin Chadwick, Sir James