Douglas D. Osheroff - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia Not logged in Log in Help. Douglas D. Osheroff. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.Douglas Dean Osheroff (born August 1, 1945) is a American physicist. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_D._Osheroff
Extractions: Douglas Dean Osheroff (born August 1 ) is a American physicist. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics in for his discovery of superfluidity in He . The discovery was done in while Osheroff was a graduate student at Cornell He earned his Bachelor's degree in from Caltech , where he was a student of Richard Feynmann . He received a PhD from Cornell University in He now teaches at Stanford University edit Categories MacArthur Fellow Nobel Prize in Physics winners Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox What links here Related changes Special pages This page was last modified 22:16, 31 May 2004. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see for details).
Extractions: Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Douglas Dean Osheroff is a American For other uses see United States (disambiguation) The United States of America U.S.A. ), also referred to as the United States U.S. America the States , is a federal republic in North America and the Pacific Ocean (the islands of Hawaii, and the Aleutians). It extends from the Atlantic coast in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. It shares land borders with Canada in the north and Mexico in the south, shares a marine border with Russia in the west, and has a collection of districts, territories, and possessions around the world including Puerto Rico, Midway Atoll, and Guam. The country has fifty states, which have a level of local autonomy. A United States citizen is usually identified as an Click the link for more information. physicist. He won the Nobel Prize The Nobel Prizes (pronounced no-BELL ) are awarded annually to people who have done outstanding research, invented groundbreaking techniques or equipment, or made outstanding contributions to society. It is generally regarded as the supreme commendation in the world today. The prizes were instituted by the final will of Alfred Nobel, a Swedish industrialist, and the inventor of dynamite. He signed his will at the Swedish-Norwegian Club in Paris on November 27, 1895. He was shocked to see how his invention was used for destructive purposes and wanted the prizes to be awarded to those who served mankind well.
Douglas D. Osheroff Douglas D. Osheroff. Douglas D. Osheroff je American fyzik. On vyhrálNobelova cena ve fyzice v 1996 pro jeho objev superfluidity v 3 On. http://wikipedia.infostar.cz/d/do/douglas_d__osheroff.html
Douglas D Osheroff - Wikipedia Douglas D Osheroff. Från Wikipedia, den fria encyklopedin. DouglasD Osheroff. Född i Aberdeen, Wirginia, USA 1945. Doktor http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_D_Osheroff
Extractions: Douglas D Osheroff . Född i Aberdeen, Wirginia, USA . Doktor i fysik vid Cornell University Nobelpristagare i fysik år Kungliga Vetenskapsakademins motivering för Nobelpriset var " för upptäckten av suprafluiditet i helium-3 ". Han delade prissumman med landsmännen David M Lee och Robert C Richardson Lee, Osheroff och Richardson upptäckte i början av 1970-talet, i lågtemperaturlaboratoriet vid Cornell University, att heliumisotopen helium-3 kan fås att bli supraflytande vid en temperatur som endast ligger omkring två tusendelar av en grad över den absoluta nollpunkten. Denna supraflytande kvantvätska skiljer sig starkt från den som redan på 1930-talet upptäcktes och studerades vid ungefär tusen gånger högre temperatur i den normala heliumisotopen helium-4. Den nya formen av helium-3 har mycket speciella egenskaper som inte kan förklaras med enbart klassisk fysik utan kräver kvantfysikaliska förklaringar. redigera Nobel e-museum, Nobelpriset i fysik 1996 http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1996/index.html Nobel e-museum, Douglas Osheroff - Självbiografi
Douglas D. Osheroff Douglas D. Osheroff. Douglas Dean Osheroff is a American physicist. He won theNobel Prize in Physics in 1996for his discovery of superfluidity in 3 He. http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/douglas_d__osheroff
Extractions: Front Page Today's Digest Week in Review Email Updates ... Outdoor Living Main Page See live article Douglas Dean Osheroff is a American physicist. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1996for his discovery of superfluidity in He . The discovery was done in while Osheroff was a graduate student at Cornell . He earned his Bachelor's degree in from Caltech , where he was a student of Richard Feynmann . He received a PhD from Cornell University in . He now teaches at Stanford University
Douglas D. Osheroff - Autobiography douglas D. osheroff Autobiography. Ethnically, I come from a mixedfamily. My father was the son of Jewish immigrants who left http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1996/osheroff-autobio.html
Extractions: Ethnically, I come from a mixed family. My father was the son of Jewish immigrants who left Russia shortly after the turn of the century, and my mother was the daughter of a Lutheran minister whose parents were from what is now Slovakia. Mostly, however, I grew up in a medical family. My father's father and all his children either became physicians or married them. My parents had met in New York where my father was a medical intern and my mother was a nurse. At the end of World War II, my parents settled in Aberdeen, a small logging town on the west coast of Washington State, where medical doctors were in short supply. Surrounded by natural beauty, it was a perfect place to raise a family, and I was the second of five children. To this day I grow pale at the sight of blood, and never for a moment considered a career in medicine. Despite this, my father, who was usually engrossed in his medical career, inspired in me passions for both photography and gardening, which were his hobbies when time permitted, as they are mine. Natural science interested me intensely from a very early age. When I was six I began tearing my toys apart to play with the electric motors. From then on, my free hours were occupied by a myriad of mechanical, chemical and electrical projects, culminating in the construction of a 100 keV X-ray machine during my senior year in high school. My projects often involved an element of danger, but my parents never seemed too concerned, nor did they inhibit me. Once a muzzle loading rifle I had built went off in the house, putting a hole through two walls. On another occasion a make-shift acetylene 'miners' lamp blew up on my chemistry bench in the basement, embedding shards of glass in the side of my face, narrowly missing my right eye. With blood running down my face, I came up the stairs cupping my hands to keep the blood off the carpet. My mother was by then at the top of the stairs. Knowing my propensity for practical jokes, she exclaimed loudly "If you're kidding I'll kill you! " As usual, my father lectured me about safety as he sewed the larger wounds closed, and there was always an unspoken understanding that that particular phase of my experimentation was over.
Osheroff, Douglas D. osheroff, douglas D., in full douglas DEAN osheroff (b. Aug osheroff received a bachelor's degree (1967) from the California Institute of Technology and a doctorate (1973) from http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/728_27.html
Extractions: in full DOUGLAS DEAN OSHEROFF (b. Aug. 1, 1945, Aberdeen, Wash., U.S.), American physicist who, along with David Lee and Robert Richardson , was the corecipient of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Physics for their discovery of superfluidity in the isotope helium Osheroff received a bachelor's degree (1967) from the California Institute of Technology and a doctorate (1973) from Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. He was a graduate student working with Lee and Richardson in the low-temperature laboratory at Cornell when the team made its discovery in 1972. The team was investigating the properties of helium-3 under temperatures of just a few thousandths of a degree above absolute zero (-273 C). Osheroff noticed minute jumps in the internal pressure of the sample of helium-3 under investigation, and he drew the team's attention to these small deviations. The researchers eventually concluded that the helium-3 had undergone a phase transition to a superfluid state, in which a liquid's atoms lose their randomness and move about in a coordinated manner. Such a substance lacks all internal friction, flows without resistance, and behaves according to quantum mechanical laws rather than to those of classical fluid mechanics. The discovery of superfluidity in helium-3 enabled scientists to study directly in macroscopicor visiblesystems the quantum mechanical effects that had previously been studied only indirectly in molecules, atoms, and subatomic particles.
Stanford University Department Of Physics - Faculty: Douglas D. Osheroff douglas D. osheroff. Physics Department Associate Chair 1967, Caltech. Ph.D., 1973, Cornell. Member of technical staff of AT T Bell Laboratories, 197287 http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/people/faculty/osheroff_douglas.html
Extractions: fax 650-725-6544 osheroff@leland.stanford.edu Group Page Specialty: ultra-low temperature physics B.S., 1967, Caltech Ph.D., 1973, Cornell Head Solid State and Low Temperature Research Department 1981-87 Professor of Physics and Applied Physics 1987-present J. G. Jackson and C. J. Wood Professor of Physics Fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member of the National Academy of Sciences Simon Memorial Prize 1976 Oliver E. Buckley Prize, 1981
Physics At Minnesota: Van Vleck Lecture: Douglas D. Osheroff School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Minnesota Van Vleck Lecture douglas D. osheroff. douglas osheroff, the twentyfourth Van Vleck Lecturer, is state, low temperature physics. Professor osheroff received the 1996 Nobel Prize in http://www.physics.umn.edu/news/vanvleck/1999.html
Extractions: Home News Vanvleck Van Vleck Home ... Help Professor Osheroff has received many awards in addition to the Nobel Prize. These include the 1998 AAPT Richtmyer Memorial Lecture Award, the 1992 J.C. Jackson and C.J. Wood Chair in Physics, the 1991 Walter J. Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching, the 1981 MacArthur Prize, the 1981 Oliver E. Buckley Prize, and the 1976 Sir Frances Simon Memorial Award. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1987 and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1982. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. University of Minnesota This URL: www.physics.umn.edu/news/vanvleck/1999.html Updated: 21st August 2002 TOP
Physics 1996 Awarded to David M. Lee, douglas D. osheroff, and Robert C. Richardson. The press release contains a good (technical) discussion of the superfluidity of helium3. http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1996/index.html
Physics 1996 3 . David M. Lee, douglas D. osheroff, Robert C. Richardson. Resources.douglas D. osheroff Autobiography Nobel Lecture Other Resources. http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1996/
Document Moved http//www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/ Faculty/osheroff.douglas.shtml. Looking for documents about Leland web services http://www-leland.stanford.edu/dept/physics/Faculty/osheroff.douglas.shtml
Extractions: http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/Faculty/osheroff.douglas.shtml Looking for documents about Leland web services? They've been moved under "/leland/". (That is, everything that used to be at "www-leland.stanford.edu/docname.html" is now at "www.stanford.edu/leland/docname.html".) For all other documents, just substitute "www" for "www-leland". As of January 1, 2000 , links that begin "http://www-leland" are considered deprecated. If the service name cannot be continued for some technical resource reason, the URL name may be discontinued and you will receive a "server not found" error, and will not receive this warning page.
1999-2000, Hanna, Stanley ,Professor Emeritus, 1999-2000, Little Mason R. ,Professor Emeritus, 19992000, Cabrera, Blas ,Professor, 1999-2000, Chu,Steven ,Professor,Chair 1999-2000, osheroff, douglas D. ,Professor, 1999-2000 http://www.stanford.edu/dept/physics/history/Phys._Roster_AY1999-2004.csv
Douglas D. Osheroff Winner Of The 1996 Nobel Prize In Physics douglas D. osheroff, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive. douglas D. osheroff. 1996 Nobel Laureate in Physics submitted by Arne Gustafsson) douglas D. osheroff Autobiography( submitted by Chinnappan Baskar) douglas D. osheroff http://www.almaz.com/nobel/physics/1996b.html
Extractions: Affiliation: Stanford University, Stanford, CA, U.S.A. Book Store Featured Internet Links Prize co-recipient: David M. Lee Prize co-recipient: Robert C. Richardson Official award announcement and brief background Detailed outline of physical theories behind the award ... Profile of Douglas Osheroff's current research activities at Stanford Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Prof. Osheroff's Home page at Stanford's Dept. of Physics (submitted by Marcos J. Montes Prof. Osheroff's Research Group's Home Page (submitted by Marcos J. Montes The original papers announcing the discovery of superfluid helium-3 Press release from Stanford University The Nobel Foundation's official site (submitted by Arne Gustafsson Douglas D. Osheroff Autobiography (submitted by Chinnappan Baskar Douglas D. Osheroff - Other Resources
Osheroff, Douglas -- Britannica Student Encyclopedia More from Britannica on osheroff, douglas 100 Encyclopædia Britannica articles,from the full 32 volume encyclopedia. , osheroff, douglas D. American http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article?eu=337266&query=hatfield, robert lee&ct=eb
Extractions: Affiliation: Stanford University, Stanford, CA, U.S.A. Book Store Featured Internet Links Prize co-recipient: David M. Lee Prize co-recipient: Robert C. Richardson Official award announcement and brief background Detailed outline of physical theories behind the award ... Profile of Douglas Osheroff's current research activities at Stanford Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Prof. Osheroff's Home page at Stanford's Dept. of Physics (submitted by Marcos J. Montes Prof. Osheroff's Research Group's Home Page (submitted by Marcos J. Montes The original papers announcing the discovery of superfluid helium-3 Press release from Stanford University The Nobel Foundation's official site (submitted by Arne Gustafsson Douglas D. Osheroff Autobiography (submitted by Chinnappan Baskar Douglas D. Osheroff - Other Resources
Douglas D. Osheroff - CIRS osheroff, douglas D. osheroff@Leland.Stanford.edu http://www.cirs-tm.org/Chercheurs/physics/OSHEROFF.htm
Index Of Nobel Laureates In Physics Translate this page Mottelson, Ben, 1975. Muller, K. Alexander, 1987. Neel, Louis, 1970. osheroff,douglas D. 1996. Paul, Wolfgang, 1989. Pauli, Wolfgang, 1945. Penzias, Arno A.1978. http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/alpha.html
Douglas D. Osheroff - CIRS osheroff, douglas D. osheroff@Leland.Stanford.edu. Professeur de physique et de physique appliquée à l'université de Stanford (EtatsUnis). Spécialité physique des ultra-basses températures. http://www.cirs-tm.org/researchers/physics/OSHEROFF.htm
Osheroff, Douglas D. osheroff, douglas D. Ethnically, I come from a mixed family. My fatherwas the son of Jewish immigrants who left Russia shortly http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/O/Osheroff/Osher
Extractions: Osheroff, Douglas D. Ethnically, I come from a mixed family. My father was the son of Jewish immigrants who left Russia shortly after the turn of the century, and my mother was the daughter of a Lutheran minister whose parents were from what is now Slovakia. Mostly, however, I grew up in a medical family. My father's father and all his children either became physicians or married them. My parents had met in New York where my father was a medical intern and my mother was a nurse. At the end of World War II, my parents settled in Aberdeen, a small logging town on the west coast of Washington State, where medical doctors were in short supply. Surrounded by natural beauty, it was a perfect place to raise a family, and I was the second of five children. To this day I grow pale at the sight of blood, and never for a moment considered a career in medicine. Despite this, my father, who was usually engrossed in his medical career, inspired in me passions for both photography and gardening, which were his hobbies when time permitted, as they are mine. Natural science interested me intensely from a very early age. When I was six I began tearing my toys apart to play with the electric motors. From then on, my free hours were occupied by a myriad of mechanical, chemical and electrical projects, culminating in the construction of a 100 keV X-ray machine during my senior year in high school.