China Hi-tech Forum 2003 Prof. samuel CC ting, Nobel Prize Laureate in Physics and Professor at theMassachusetts Institute of Technology, US. 230500 Panel Discussion. http://www.news-chtf.com/english/forum/Agenda.htm
Extractions: Time: October 12-14, 2003 ¡¡¡¡Forum Speakers and the Accompanying Persons are Welcomed to Attend the Following Activities, please inform us in your earliest convenience: ¡¡¡¡(Please kindly note that the time of the Welcoming Banquet scheduled in the evening of Oct. 11 has been adjusted to Oct. 12.) ¡¡¡¡1. Opening Ceremony of the CHTF, 9:30-9:50 a.m., October 12, at the square of the CHTF Exhibition Center, hosted by Chinese senior government officials ¡¡¡¡2. Welcoming Banquet, 12:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m., October 12, at Wuzhou Hall, Wuzhou Guest House, hosted by Guangdong Provincial and Shenzhen Municipal Governments ¡¡¡¡3. Large Scale Round-Table Conference for CHTF VIPs, 3:00-5:00 p.m., October 12, at Wuzhou Hall, Wuzhou Guest House. Theme: The Development of the World¡¯s Economy and Regional Co-operation
Extractions: Jentschke's home In March 1963, I had just obtained my PhD from the University of Michigan and came to CERN where I had the good fortune to start working with Giuseppe Cocconi, Klaus Winter, Gustav Weber and Marcel Vivargent. After returning to the US, I worked with Leon Lederman at Columbia University and also wrote a paper in quantum electrodynamics with Stanley J Brodsky on higher-order Bethe-Heitler pairs. + e + carbon was measured in order to test the validity of QED at small distances. This experiment generated a great deal of interest and was at the centre of discussions in the community of high-energy physicists. My previous work with Stan Brodsky spurred my interest in this result and compelled me into redoing this experiment. Klaus Winter introduced me to Prof. Jentschke, director-general of the Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY) in Hamburg, and this proved to be a major event in my career as an experimental physicist. Jentschke showed an abiding interest in our work and often visited us on weekends or late at night to discuss our results. He also introduced me to many leading German physicists - Wolfgang Paul, Herwig Schopper, Max Born and others. He often invited my family and me to his home when we were not taking data. From discussions with him, I learned of the tremendous efforts he had made in founding DESY and his desire to make it a world-class laboratory. His wisdom and inspiration were of great help to me, such as when he advised me to accept an offer from MIT where I have worked ever since. At that time, I had received many attractive offers. MIT's was the only one that was not tenured, but Willi's advice turned out to be correct in the long run.
RÉSUMÉ samuel CC ting award, University of Science and Technology of China, namedafter the Nobel laureate samuel CC ting, for academic excellence. http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~ltang/resume.html
Extractions: (2) Data Acquisition and Analysis Programming (C, Assembly). B. S. Biophysics RESEARCH EXPERIENCE: Ph.D. Thesis Research , Caltech, with Dr. Erin M. Schuman, 9/94 - present A primary research on the role of cadherin family of cell adhesion molecules in synaptic plasticity of adult hippocampus. Details in section "SUMMARY OF MY PH.D. THESIS". Programmer of human genome project , Caltech Genome Research Center, with Dr. Ung-Jin Kim, Created interactive human genome database manager - front-end GUI (C++, SQL) connecting SQL server.
KSC-00PP-1960 - Dr. Samuel Ting, Nobel Laureate, Visits SSPF. Nobel laureate Professor samuel CC ting of the Massachusetts Instituteof Technology pauses for a photo in the Space Station Processing Facility. http://images.ksc.nasa.gov/photos/2000/captions/KSC-00PP-1960.html
Extractions: (Bytes) Thumbnail GIF Slide GIF Low GIF Medium JPEG High JPEG Name: NASA Kennedy Space Center Address: KSC Public Affairs Office National Aeronautics and Space Administration John F. Kennedy Space Center Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899 NIX Search KSC Search Photos By: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
China Daily Print Edition NANJING samuel CC ting, a worldrenowned physicist and Gu Guanqun, president ofSoutheast University (SEU) in Nanjing, capital of East China s Jiangsu Province http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2002-06/03/content_122132.htm
Extractions: NANJING: Samuel C. C. Ting, a world-renowned physicist and Gu Guanqun, president of Southeast University (SEU) in Nanjing, capital of East China's Jiangsu Province, signed a three-year protocol on May 31, the 100th anniversary of the famous university. The protocol concerns SEU's participation in experiments with the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer 02 (AMS-02) on the International Space Station (ISS) led by Nobel laureate Ting. It is the first time that a Chinese university will take part in one of the ISS's most important and difficult projects. According to Ting, universities have the best academic atmosphere and freedom. "Most Nobel Prize winners come from universities," he said. "I have been to SEU many times," explained Ting, who is also an hounorary professor of SEU. "The teachers here are very much interested in scientific research. They always put their whole heart into the work and never give up. That is the most important reason why I chose this Chinese university to co-operate with." Apart from SEU, many world-famous universities are also participating in the AMS-02 experiments, such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States, Aachen University in Germany, Rome University in Italy and Zurich University in Switzerland.
Academy Members (T) Tilly, Charles, III, 1, FELLOW. Tilman, George, David, II, 4, FELLOW.ting, samuel, CC, I, 2, FELLOW. Tinkham, Michael, I, 2, FELLOW. Tinoco,Ignacio, I, 3, FELLOW. http://www.amacad.org/members/t.htm
Extractions: Class III : Social Sciences Section 1 - Section 2 - Economics Section 3 - Section 4 - Law (including the Practice of Law) Class IV Section 1 - Section 2 - History Section 3 - Literary Criticism (including Philology) Section 4 - Literature (Fiction, Poetry, Short Stories, Nonfiction, Playwrighting, Screenwriting) Section 5 - Class V Section 1 - Section 2 - Section 3 - Type 't hooft Gerard I FHM Tabellini Guido III FHM Tabin Clifford J. II FELLOW Tabor Herbert II FELLOW Taft-Morris Cynthia III FELLOW Tai Hue-Tam Ho IV FELLOW Tait William W. IV FELLOW Takahashi Joseph S. II FELLOW Takahata Naoyuki II FHM Talalay Paul II FELLOW Talley Lynne I FELLOW Tambiah Stanley Jeyarajah III FELLOW Tanenbaum Morris I FELLOW Tange Kenzo IV FHM Tank David W. I FELLOW Tanner James Mourilyan II FHM Tapies Antoni IV FHM Tardos Eva I FELLOW Tarjan Robert Endre I FELLOW Tarrow Sidney G.
National Academy Of Sciences Tilly, Charles. Tilman, G. David. Tilney, Lewis G. Tilton, George R. ting, SamuelCC. Tinkham, M. Tinoco, Ignacio, Jr. Title, Alan M. Tits, Jacques. Tjian, Robert. http://www4.nationalacademies.org/nas/naspub.nsf/urllinks/$$AlphaListT?OpenDocum
Extractions: Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition aka "Black Sam" Bellamy sailed "the Whydah Gally Whydah Gally was the ship of the pirate "Black Sam" Bellamy. It was named after a west-african trading post. It marks the only confirmed pirate ship salvaged in modern times, found near Cape Cod. Click the link for more information. " when she sank off Cape Cod in a storm. It's gold was retrieved in modern times, being the only known pirate ship salvaged. Whydah is the name of a trading post in Africa at the time, near ivory coast. Gally is spelled galley today. preview not available. Click the link for more information.
By Alphabetical Order Translate this page Taylor, Richard E. Thomson, Sir George Paget Thomson, Sir Joseph John ting, SamuelCC Tomonaga, Sin-Itiro Townes, Charles H. Tsui, Daniel C. Van Der Waals http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/Physics/aboutphysics/Nobelprize/alp
Nobel Prize 1976 J/psi is composed of a charmed quark bound to its antiquark. SamuelCC ting. ting accepting the Prize from King Gustav of Sweden. http://mfnl.xjtu.edu.cn/gov-doe-bnl/bnlweb/Nobel/Nobel_76.html
Extractions: The 1976 Nobel Prize in physics was shared by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher who used Brookhaven's Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) to discover a new particle and confirm the existence of the charmed quark. Samuel C.C. Ting was credited for finding what he called the "J" particle, the same particle as the "psi" found at nearly the same time at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center by a group led by Burton Richter. The particle is now known as the J/psi. Ting's experiment took advantage of the AGS's high-intensity proton beams, which bombarded a stationary target to produce showers of particles that could be detected by complex detectors. A strong peak in electron and positron production at an energy of 3.1 billion electron volts (GeV) led Ting to suspect the presence of a new particle, the same one found by Richter. Their discoveries not only won the Nobel Prize; they also helped confirm the existence of the charmed quark the J/psi is composed of a charmed quark bound to its antiquark. Samuel C.C. Ting
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Extractions: Phys. Rev. Lett. Phys. Rev. A Phys. Rev. B Phys. Rev. C Phys. Rev. D Phys. Rev. E Phys. Rev. ST AB Rev. Mod. Phys. Phys. Rev. (Series I) Phys. Rev. Volume: Page/Article: Previous article Next article Issue 23 contents View Page Images or PDF (449 kB) [ Buy this Article J. J. Aubert, U. Becker, P. J. Biggs, J. Burger, M. Chen, G. Everhart, P. Goldhagen, J. Leong, T. McCorriston, T. G. Rhoades, M. Rohde, Samuel C. C. Ting, and Sau Lan Wu Received 12 November 1974 We report the observation of a heavy particle J , with mass m =3.1 GeV and width approximately zero. The observation was made from the reaction p Be e x by measuring the e e mass spectrum with a precise pair spectrometer at the Brookhaven National Laboratory's 30-GeV alternating-gradient synchrotron. URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v33/p1404
Extractions: Phys. Rev. Lett. Phys. Rev. A Phys. Rev. B Phys. Rev. C Phys. Rev. D Phys. Rev. E Phys. Rev. ST AB Rev. Mod. Phys. Phys. Rev. (Series I) Phys. Rev. Volume: Page/Article: MyArticles: View Collection Help (Click on the to add an article.) Previous article Next article Issue 19 contents View Page Images or PDF (618 kB) [ Buy this Article III Physikalisches Institut, Technische Hochschule, D-5100 Aachen, Federal Republic of Germany, and Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973, and California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, and Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron DESY, D-2000 Hamburg 52, Federal Republic of Germany, and Laboratory for Nuclear Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, and Junta de Energia Nuclear, Madrid, Spain, and Nationaal Instituut voor Kernfysica en Hoge-Energiefysica, 1009-DB Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Science, Peking, People's Republic of China.