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         Chu Steven:     more books (42)
  1. Obama and the military-industrial-scientific complex.(Less Energy)(Barack Obama): An article from: Synthesis/Regeneration by Karl Grossman, 2009-03-22
  2. Obama cabinet picks vow to strengthen role of science.(FROM THE HILL)(Barack Obama): An article from: Issues in Science and Technology by Unavailable, 2009-03-22
  3. MAYBE IT TAKES 2-BY-4 TO STOP LAND ABUSE ...(Editorials): An article from: The Santa Fe New Mexican (Santa Fe, NM) by Unavailable, 2009-07-13
  4. Conozca a la nueva administraciôn: con llegada de Barack Obama a la Casa Blanca, unos ocho mil cargos quedan vacantes en nueva administraciôn. Ya constituyô ... Renovaciôn.: An article from: Semana by Unavailable, 2009-01-18
  5. Roof coatings: cool technology is a hot topic.: An article from: JCT CoatingsTech by Cynthia Challener, 2010-08-01
  6. Obama's Gift To The Greens.: An article from: APS Review Oil Market Trends by Unavailable, 2009-02-23
  7. Washington outlook.(INFORMATION TO AMUSE, ENLIGHTEN, AND INSPIRE): An article from: American Forests by Gerry Gray, 2009-01-01
  8. NEW MEXICO TRIO MAKES 'SMART GRID' CASE.(Editorials): An article from: The Santa Fe New Mexican (Santa Fe, NM) by Gale Reference Team, 2009-05-12
  9. JEFF, LANL: MAKE CASE FOR WAR-AND-PEACE ROLE.(Editorials): An article from: The Santa Fe New Mexican (Santa Fe, NM) by Gale Reference Team, 2009-04-14
  10. Nuclear waste disposal showdown at Yucca Mountain: the administration's decision to withdraw the application for a nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain, ... from: Issues in Science and Technology by Luther J. Carter, Lake H. Barrett, et all 2010-09-22
  11. Myth, Gender, And Subjectivity (Hsin Chu Bank Endowed Lecture Series on Thought and Culture) by P. Steven Sangren, 1997
  12. Wen xue yan jiu de he fa hua: Yi zhong xin shi yong zhu yi : zheng ti hua he jing yan zhu yi wen xue yu wen hua yan jiu fang fa (Bei da xue shu jiang yan cong shu) (Mandarin Chinese Edition) by Steven Totosy de Zepetnek, 1997
  13. Sui yi ji (Yi zhou kan xi lie) (Mandarin Chinese Edition) by Steven N. S Cheung, 1993

41. ASME NEWS Online November 2000 -- Nobel Laureate To Speak At Workshop
nobel Laureate to speak The 1997 nobel Laureate in physics will be amongthe speakers at ASME's nanotechnology workshop next month. steven chu.
http://www.asmenews.org/archives/backissues/nov00/features/nobel.html
Nobel Laureate to speak
T he 1997 Nobel Laureate in physics will be among the speakers at ASME's nanotechnology workshop next month. Steven Chu Steven Chu, who is chair of the physics department at Stanford University, is recognized in the field of nanoengineering as having broad ideas about the field's applications. He will lead off the panel and speak about "Nano Systems to Come." Chu's research interests include the development and use of laser cooling, atom trapping and atom optics. Also scheduled to speak is Carlo D. Montemagno, a professor at Cornell University who holds a Ph.D. in civil engineering. He will talk about his current research, which is focused on the application of nanotechnology to biological systems. His projects are directed at the development of biomolecular motor powered nanoelectromechanical devices and the engineering of on-chip detectors for pathogens. His interests focus upon the development of numeric and experimental techniques to explore methods of integrating single molecule biological motors with nanoscale silicon devices and the role of the cytoskeleton in processing intracellular information, among other subjects. front page features columns milestones ... ASME.ORG

42. We Hear That
Physics background for steven chu's 1997 nobel Prize in Physics (PressRelease from the nobel Foundation, October 15, 1997); Homepage
http://www.ocpaweb.org/we_hear_that.html
OVERSEAS CHINESE PHYSICS ASSOCIATION
We hear that

43. Atoms Floating In Optical Molasses, Chu, Steven And Claude Cohen Tannoudji And W
The work of steven chu, Claude CohenTannoudji and William D. Phillips in the Recentapplications related to the 1997 nobel Prize in Physics are the first
http://www.ifs.tuwien.ac.at/~aschatt/info/citations/294.html
[Previous] [Next] [Index] Nobelprice Document Type BibTex Key Owner misc Title Atoms floating in optical molasses Author Chu, Steven and Claude Cohen Tannoudji and William D. Phillips Journal Number Pages Year Month Archive Borrowed to Keywords atoms and laser cooling and trapping, interaction between light and matter, Bose-Einstein condensation Booktitle Chapter Edition Series Editor Publisher Institution Address Howpublished Organisation School Annote Note Key Type of Tech. Report Abstract/Comment Attachment Tag as357187592803009.atx [Previous] [Next] [Index]

44. Research Highlights-MAR/APR 98
ideas that work. Below Dr. steven chu, 1997 nobel PrizeWinner in Physics (pictured center) with students from Stanford University.
http://www.afosr.af.mil/pages/afrtrhmar.htm

Text Version of Site

1997 Physics Nobel Price Rooted in Air Force Support "Dr. Chu is an idea man who comes up with ideas that work."

Below: Dr. Steven Chu, 1997 Nobel Prize Winner in Physics (pictured center) with students from Stanford University
T his year’s Nobel Prize winning research in physics is likely to benefit the Air Force with a wide array of new capabilities in navigation, guidance, accelerometers, and electronics. The prize was awarded in October to Dr. Steven Chu of Stanford University, one of three physicists sharing the prize for their “development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light.” The Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), together with the National Science Foundation, has funded Dr. Chu’s research in the techniques of optical cooling and the trapping of atoms since 1988. This method to cool and trap atoms with laser light provides the foundation for atom interferometers, atom lasers and more precise frequency standards — the basis for atomic clocks. These devices will be used to benefit the Air Force in the following areas:
  • navigation, guidance and control systems (using atom interferometers for accelerometers and rotation sensors)

45. Currents--October 27, 1997
nobel goes to alumnus steven chu. Rochester alumnus steven chu '70has been named cowinner of the 1997 nobel Prize for Physics.
http://www.rochester.edu/pr/Currents/V25/V25N19/story3.html
Nobel goes to alumnus Steven Chu
Rochester alumnus Steven Chu '70 has been named co-winner of the 1997 Nobel Prize for Physics. Chu, along with William Phillips and Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, was cited for developing novel ways to cool atoms to super-low temperatures with laser light. The work allows researchers to manipulate matter at a temperature that was previously unattainable, and raises the possibility of technologies based in the subatomic realm of quantum physics. "The new methods of investigation that the Nobel laureates have developed have contributed greatly to increasing our knowledge of the interplay between radiation and matter," the citation from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said. The work, the citation added, "may lead to the design of more-precise atomic clocks for use in space navigation and accurate determination of position." A double major at Rochester, Chu graduated in 1970 with a B.S. in physics and a B.A. in mathematics. He went on to earn his Ph.D. at Berkeley and is now professor of physics at Stanford. Chu becomes the seventh Nobel laureate to have studied or taught at Rochester. The others: chemist Vincent du Vigneaud '27M (Ph.D.); medical researchers Arthur Kornberg '41M (MD) and Carleton Gajdusek '42; and faculty members George Hoyt Whipple, founding dean of the medical school; biochemist Henrik Dam, at the medical school in the 1940s; and economist Robert Fogel, on the economics faculty during the '60s and '70s.

46. Rochester Review V60 N3--Features
But when more calls followed in quick succession, it became clear that this was nohoax steven chu was indeed one of three winners of the 1997 nobel Prize in
http://www.rochester.edu/pr/Review/V60N3/feature3.html
The Rochester Review, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA ost of us dread the middle-of-the-night phone call that jangles us out of bed with news likely to be troublesome. But for a few days each October, scientists everywhere rest only fitfully, half hoping to hear that telephone ring. For those are the days when the Nobel Prize committee metes out awards to the few singled out for the world's top scientific tribute. But when the call came for Steven Chu '70, he didn't believe it. The Stanford University professor was awakened at about 3 a.m. last October 15 by a radio station probing his reaction to "winning the Nobel Prize." Chu, who works in a laboratory full of jokesters, figured that he knew the source of the call and declined comment. But when more calls followed in quick succession, it became clear that this was no hoax: Steven Chu was indeed one of three winners of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics. Most laureates hear the news not from a disk jockey but from the august Nobel committee itself. But area codes around the nation have been changing by the nanosecond, and not even the Nobel panel could keep up with the California changes. Chu finally got official word at 1 o'clock that dayafter he'd given a few dozen phone interviews, appeared at a news conference beamed around the world, and, business as usual, had met his graduate-level class in quantum mechanics. ell, not quite as usual, as it happened. After a standing ovation, the class demanded, and got, a detailed explanation of just how he had used lasers to chill and trap atoms, the basis for his award-winning work.

47. Steven Chu - CIRS
chu, steven schu@leland.stanford.edu. Spectroscopy (1994), Science for art Prize andHumboldt Senior Scientist Award (1995), Corecipient of the nobel Prize for
http://www.cirs.net/researchers/physics/chu.htm
CHU, STEVEN
schu@leland.stanford.edu Physics Dept. Chair Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University Research Interests :
Atomic Physics (Current research interests include the development and use of laser cooling, atom trapping and atom optics techniques), Polymer Dynamics and Biophysics with Single Molecules, Experimental Atomic Physics, Quantum Electronics , Laser Physics , Biophysics, Polymer Physics. Awards :
American Physical Society, Broida Prize for Laser Spectroscopy (1987), APS/AAPT Richtmyer Memorial Prize Lecture (1990), Co-winner of the King Faisal International Prize for Science (1993), Am. Phys. Soc., Arthur Schawlow Prize for Laser Science (1994), Opt. Soc. Am., William F. Meggers Award for Spectroscopy (1994), Science for art Prize and Humboldt Senior Scientist Award (1995), Co-recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physics (1997).
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48. The Nobel Prize In Physics 1997 Was Awarded For Development Of Methods To Cool A
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1997 nobel Prizein Physics jointly to Professor steven chu, Stanford University, Stanford
http://www.sciner.com/ALO/nobel_physics97.htm
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly to
Professor Steven Chu , Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA,
Professor Claude Cohen-Tannoudji , College de France and Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France, and
Dr. William D. Phillips , National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA,
for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light.
Atoms floating in optical molasses
Steven Chu, Claude Cohen-Tannoudji
, and William D. Phillips
Slowing down atoms with photons

Light may be described as a stream of particles, photons. Photons have no mass in the normal sense but, just like a curling stone sliding along the ice they have a certain momentum. A curling stone that collides with an identical stone can transfer all its momentum (mass times velocity) to that stone and itself become stationary. Similarly, a photon that collides with an atom can transfer all its momentum to that atom. For this to happen the photon must have the right energy, which is the same as saying that the light must have the right frequency, or colour. This is because the energy of the photon is proportional to the frequency of the light, which in turn determines the latter?s colour. Thus red light consists of photons with lower energy than those of blue light.
Doppler cooling and optical molasses
The slowing down effect described above forms the basis for a powerful method of cooling atoms with laser light. The method was developed around 1985 by

49. Nobel Prizes In Physics
1. PRIZE YEAR. nobel PHYSICISTS. SUPERVISOR. Ph.D. UNIVERSITY. DATES. Age (years).Age at Prize. 1970. 86. 54. 1997. chu, steven. Eugene Commins. 1976. UC Berkeley.1948 . 49.
http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/PHYS/
Nobel Prizes in Physics
Department of Chemistry, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ONTARIO M3J 1P3, CANADA For suggestions, corrections, additional information, and comments please send e-mails to jandraos@yorku.ca http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/ NOBEL PRIZE PHYSICS YEAR NAME OF SCIENTISTS NATIONALITY TYPE OF PHYSICS Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen German radiation Henrik Antoon Lorentz Dutch magnetism, radiation Pieter Zeeman Dutch magnetism, radiation Pierre Curie French radiation Marie Curie French radiation Antoine Henri Becquerel French radiation Lord John William Strutt Rayleigh British gases Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard Hungarian-German cathode rays Sir Joseph John Thomson British gases Albert Abraham Michelson German-American spectroscopy Gabriel Lippmann French optics Guglielmo Marconi Italian telegraphy Carl Ferdinand Braun German telegraphy Johannes Diderik van der Waals Dutch gases Wilhelm Wien German radiation Nils Gustaf Dalen Swedish gases Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes Dutch cryogenics Max von Laue German crystallography Sir William Henry Bragg British crystallography Sir William Lawrence Bragg British crystallography no prize awarded Charles Glover Barkla British radiation Max Planck German quantum theory, radiation

50. Two New Nobel Laureates At Stanford
On Wednesday, Professor steven chu learned that he had been awarded the NobelPrize for physics along with two colleagues in Maryland and France.
http://www.paweekly.com/PAW/morgue/news/1997_Oct_17.NOBEL000.html
Publication Date: Friday Oct 17, 1997
STANFORD: Two new Nobel laureates at Stanford
Stanford awarded physics prize for third consecutive year Vicky Anning Champagne flowed for two days running at Stanford University this week as two professors were awarded the Nobel Prize in the fields of economics and physics. On Tuesday, Professor Myron S. Scholes from Stanford's Graduate School of Business heard that he and Harvard colleague Robert C. Merton had won the Nobel Prize for economics. On Wednesday, Professor Steven Chu learned that he had been awarded the Nobel Prize for physics along with two colleagues in Maryland and France. This is the third consecutive year that the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences bestowed the physics prize upon a professor associated with Stanford. Last year, Professor Douglas D. Osheroff won the physics prize, and in 1995, SLAC professor Martin Perl received the same honor. Scholes, 56, learned of his new status at 5:30 a.m. Tuesday morning, when his brother, David, called from New York after hearing the news on the radio. The honor did not come as a complete surprise to Scholes, who has been mentioned over the years as a possible contender for the prize for his pioneering work in the valuation of stock options. "When people say over the years that you've done great work, you say to yourself, 'Maybe it will happen,'" said Scholes. "When you get the call in the morning, it's still a tremendous shock and a great deal of excitement."

51. Nobel Prize Winner Now Honorary Professor Of Shanghai Jiaotong University
Dr. steven chu, winner of the 1997 nobel Prize in Physics, has been invited tobe an honorary professor of Shanghai Jiaotong University in a grand ceremony
http://www.sjtu.edu.cn/englishweb/news/news-31.htm
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... More News Nobel Prize winner now honorary professor of Shanghai Jiaotong University Dr. Steven Chu, winner of the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, has been invited to be an honorary professor of Shanghai Jiaotong University in a grand ceremony held in Shanghai yesterday. Yuchu Wang (or Wang Yuzhu), an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Dr. Chu's wife, was among nearly 100 attendees at the ceremony, at which Prof. Xie Shengwu, president of Shanghai Jiaotong University presented Dr. Chu the letter of appointment and a school badge of the university. A Chinese-American, Dr. Chu traces his ancestral home to Taicang in east China's Jiangsu Province. He is currently a professor at the Physics Department of prestigious Stanford University in the United States. Shanghai Daily.
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52. Physics 1997
The nobel Prize in Physics 1997. for development of methods to cool and trap atomswith laser light . steven chu, Claude CohenTannoudji, William D. Phillips.
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1997/

53. Press Release The Nobel Prize In Physics 1997
15 October 1997 The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1997Nobel Prize in Physics jointly to Professor steven chu, Stanford University
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1997/press.html

54. William D. Phillips Named Nobel Prize Winner For Physics
In October 1997, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the nobel prize forPhysics to William Phillips of NIST, steven chu of Stanford University, and
http://museum.nist.gov/exhibits/timeline/item.cfm?itemId=65

55. William D. Phillips Named Nobel Prize Winner For Physics
In October 1997, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the nobel prize forPhysics to William Phillips of NIST, steven chu of Stanford University, and
http://museum.nist.gov/exhibits/timeline/printerFriendly.cfm?itemId=65

56. Nobel 97 - 1 - NOVEMBRE 1997
Translate this page Le prix nobel de physique récompense cette année les Américains steven chu (universitéde Stanford, Californie) et William Phillips (Institut national des
http://www.cite-sciences.fr/actu/numeros/N54_nov97/kiosques/html/nobel1.html
SCIENCE ACTUALITES - NOVEMBRE 1997 -
Le Nobel de physique
Steven Chu
"Mon prix n'est que le fruit des efforts menés par ceux qui ont reconstruit l'école de physique en France au lendemain de la guerre" "Claude, c'est le théoricien des interactions de la lumière laser avec les atomes de la matière; Bill, c'est l'auteur de la première expérience de ralentissement d'un jet d'atomes par un faisceau laser se propageant en sens contraire; et Steven, lui, est l'auteur de la première expérience de piégeage par lumière laser, de la première mélasse optique." Claude Cohen-Tannoudji
William D.Phillips
"Tout à fait entre nous, on avait un peu peur que le Nobel aille à des physiciens comme, par exemple, Ketterle du MIT à Boston ou Weiman et Cornell à Boulder, au Colorado. Ils font partie de la jeune génération de physiciens, les pères des condensats de Bose-Einstein, ce nouvel état de la matière qui découle des travaux menés par la génération de Claude et qui a fasciné récemment le monde des physiciens de l'atome". * REMY BRUCKERT Cliquez ici Sommaire des kiosques A la une

57. University Of Akron News - Nobel Physicist At University April 17
Akron, Ohio, April 2, 1998 — nobel Prizewinning physicist steven chu is thekeynote speaker for the 1998 Waldo Semon Lecture and Undergraduate Research
http://www.uakron.edu/news/articles/uamain_72.php
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Nobel Physicist at University April 17 Akron, Ohio, April 2, 1998 — Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Chu is the keynote speaker for the 1998 Waldo Semon Lecture and Undergraduate Research Award Symposium at 11 a.m., April 17 at The University of Akron Goodyear Polymer Center.
The BFGoodrich Company sponsors the annual Semon program to promote and recognize outstanding undergraduate research in polymer science and polymer engineering in the United States. Five finalists for the Waldo Semon Undergraduate Research Award in Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering present seminars describing their research. The winner receives a $2,000 prize.
The lecture and symposium are named for Waldo Semon, a pioneering polymer scientist inducted into the National Inventor's Hall of Fame and Goodrich's director of polymer research from 1954-1961. Return... Business Units: Development Purchasing Employment Parking UAPD Computing Support Desk Martin Center Food Services Student Union Find: UA Pages Directories Contact Us The University of Akron is an Equal Education and Employment Institution.

58. Untitled
List of Laureates to attend the meeting linked to the www.nobel.se webpage withinfo about each. Alferov, Zhores chu, steven Esaki, Leo Fischer, Ernst Giaever
http://www.phys.vt.edu/~ucn/Lindau2001/laureate.html
List of Laureates to attend the meeting linked to the www.nobel.se webpage with info about each.
Alferov, Zhores

Chu, Steven

Esaki, Leo

Fischer, Ernst
...
Arber, Werner

59. Garden City's Own Nobel Prize Winner Returns
school. Superintendent of Schools Dr. Stephen Leitman, nobel Prize winnerDr. steven chu and Board of Education President Linda Leone.
http://www.antonnews.com/gardencitylife/2000/04/14/news/
ONLINE EDITION FRIDAY APRIL 14, 2000 News Sports Opinion Obituaries ... Contents News
Garden City's Own Nobel Prize Winner Returns to the High School
By Susie Trenkle
Dr. Steven, Chu, a 1966 graduate of Garden City High School, and 1997 winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics, returned to his alma mater last Monday to speak to science students from the elementary schools and high school. Superintendent of Schools Dr. Stephen Leitman, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Steven Chu and Board of Education President Linda Leone. Currently a professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University, Dr. Chu was awarded the Nobel Prize for his study of the laser cooling and trapping of atoms. He is also the recipient of the Herbert Broida Prize for Spectroscopy, the Richtmyer Memorial Prize Lecturer, co-winner of the King Faisal International Prize for Science, the Arthur Schawlow Prize for Laser Science, the William Meggers Award for Laser Spectroscopy, and the Science for Art Prize. In addition, Dr. Chu received a Humbolt Senior Scientist Award in 1995 and the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1996. Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Stephen Leitman and Board of Education President Linda Leone presented Dr. Chu with a certificate in recognition of his return to Garden City. "We're honored that you're here and honored that a graduate of Garden City High School won the Nobel Prize," said Leone.

60. University Gazette, February 23, 2000
steven chu, who won the 1997 nobel Prize in physics for developing methods tocool and trap atoms with laser light, will speak March 22 at Carolina.
http://gazette.unc.edu/archives/00feb23/file.9.html
TABLE OF CONTENTS FRONT PAGE NEXT ARTICLE PREVIOUS ARTICLE ... UNC HOMEPAGE
Nobel laureate to give science seminar March 22
S teven Chu, who won the 1997 Nobel Prize in physics for developing methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light, will speak March 22 at Carolina. His free, public lecture, "Holding onto Atoms and Molecules with Laser Beams," will be held at 7 p.m. in Hill Hall auditorium. Chu is the third speaker in the Chancellor's Science Seminar Series, which brings world-renowned investigators in the basic and applied sciences to Carolina for lectures aimed at enhancing the public's awareness of scientific discoveries and contributions to society. The series also highlights and nurtures outstanding research at Carolina, said Greg Forest, series organizer and senior associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences. "We at Carolina are enthusiastic about providing a steady stream of the world's outstanding scientists for the public to enjoy and learn from," Forest said. "Steven Chu surely fits this description. We hope a broad range of people interested in this fascinating field will join us March 22nd. It's a unique opportunity to hear and see one of the true great scientists of our time in a forum for the general public." Chu professor of physics and applied physics as well as the Theodore and Frances Geballe professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences at Stanford University has made major contributions in laser spectroscopy, atomic physics, biophysics, polymer physics and quantum physics.

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