Search Details

Word: osheroff (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...colleague at Stanford, Professor Doug Osheroff echoes the sentiments of Georgi, pointing out that Mills has chosen a field of experimentation considered by most physicists to be already very well understood...

Author: By Jacqueline A. Newmyer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Academics Question The Science Behind BlackLight Power, Inc. | 5/17/2000 | See Source »

...Quantum mechanics was invented to understand physics," Osheroff says. "It's never been found to be flawed...

Author: By Jacqueline A. Newmyer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Academics Question The Science Behind BlackLight Power, Inc. | 5/17/2000 | See Source »

Cornell University researchers David Lee, Robert Richardson and Douglas Osheroff made their Nobel-winning discovery in 1972. They were working with helium-3, a rare isotope of the common gas, looking for a "phase transition," analogous to the changes in water when it turns from vapor to liquid and from liquid to ice. They had cooled a sample to within two one-thousandths of a degree of absolute zero (-459.67[degrees] F), the temperature at which atomic motion ceases...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NOBEL PRIZES: FROM BUCKYBALLS TO USED CARS | 10/21/1996 | See Source »

...they were charting the changing pressures, the Nobel citation states, "it was Osheroff's vigilant eye that noticed small extra jumps in the curve." Those jumps, it turned out, represented the change of helium-3 into a superfluid, a liquid with no viscosity that can climb up and over the walls of its container and exhibits other bizarre quantum behavior ordinarily observed only in subatomic particles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NOBEL PRIZES: FROM BUCKYBALLS TO USED CARS | 10/21/1996 | See Source »

STOCKHOLM, Sweden: Three American physicists will share the 1996 Nobel Prize in their field for work on the physical properties of supercooled helium. David Lee and Robert Richardson of Cornell University and Douglas Osheroff of Stanford discovered in the early 1970s that at very low temperatures, helium-3 demonstrates characteristics of superfluidity Scot Woods

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nobels in Physics, Chemistry Awarded | 10/9/1996 | See Source »

| 1 | 2 | Next