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         Ketterle Wolfgang:     more detail
  1. Icaleo '90: Optical Methods in Flow and Particle Diagnostics (Proceedings of Spie) by Robert W. Dibble, Doninique Fourguette, et all 1991-12
  2. Physiker (21. Jahrhundert): Stephen Hawking, Wolfgang Ketterle, Steven Weinberg, Willis E. Lamb, Steven Jones, Reinhard Oehme, Christoph Cremer (German Edition)
  3. Studienstiftung Des Deutschen Volkes: Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Gesine Schwan, Ulrich Beck, Ulrike Meinhof, Gudrun Ensslin, Wolfgang Ketterle (French Edition)
  4. Members of the Optical Society of America: Robert Curl, Zhores Alferov, Wolfgang Ketterle, Carl Wieman, Eric Allin Cornell, Steven Chu
  5. Technical University of Munich Alumni: Rudolf Diesel, Heinrich Hertz, Albert Speer, Thomas Mann, Wolfgang Ketterle, Wilhelm Groth, Otto Haxel
  6. Studienstiftung Alumni: Ulrike Meinhof, Gudrun Ensslin, Wolfgang Ketterle, J. Hans D. Jensen, Gesine Schwan, Pierre Colas, Andy Bechtolsheim
  7. El quinto estado de la materia.(física)(TT: The fifth state of matter.)(TA: physics)(Artículo Breve): An article from: Epoca by Esperanza G. Molina, Antonio I. Campillo, 2001-11-30

21. Ketterle Wins Nobel For Work In Physics
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences named MIT Physics Professor wolfgang Ketterleas one of the 2001 nobel Prize laureates in Physics on Tuesday for his work
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V121/N50/50nobel.50n.html
Ketterle Wins Nobel For Work in Physics
By Eun J. Lee ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences named MIT Physics Professor Wolfgang Ketterle as one of the 2001 Nobel Prize laureates in Physics on Tuesday for his work in experimentally discovering Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC), a new state of matter. Essentially, Einstein predicted that if a gas of certain types of atoms are cooled to a very low temperature, all the atoms will suddenly gather in the lowest possible energy state to form a new state of matter. The main problem that physicists had to solve in order to experimentally produce BECs was that of developing the technology to supercool atoms down to micro and nano Kelvins. Pritchard best described the magnitude of this problem in the following synopsis: The average room temperature is about 300 Kelvins. If you decrease this temperature by a factor of ten, you reach the temperature of interstellar space. The temperature needed to produce BEC is still more than a million times less than that, where the average velocity of each atom is measured in millimeters per second. Lecture sheds light on BECs Ketterle gave a lecture on Thursday evening in 10-250 to an audience packed with professors, students, and other members of the MIT community.

22. Des Chercheurs Américains Et Allemand Reçoivent Le Nobel De Physique
Translate this page suédoise a attribué mardi le prix nobel de physique 2001 aux Américains EricA. Cornell et Carl E. Wieman et à l'Allemand wolfgang ketterle pour leur
http://www.tf1.fr/news/sciences/0,,825538,00.html
L'Acad©mie royale des sciences su©doise a attribu© mardi le prix Nobel de physique 2001 aux Am©ricains Eric A. Cornell et Carl E. Wieman et   l'Allemand Wolfgang Ketterle pour leur "d©couverte d'un nouvel ©tat de la mati¨re, le condensat de Bose-Einstein". OAS_AD('Top'); Accueil tf1.fr Astro Bourse Cin©ma ... SCIENCES
L'©pid©mie de pneumonie atypique...
Je ne me sens pas concern©(e) Cela m'inqui¨te Vos derniers avis A L'ANTENNE LE SITE DU 13H LCI LIVE TOUS LES JT EN VIDEO Accueil TF1 ... SCIENCES Des chercheurs am©ricains et allemand re§oivent le Nobel de physique
L'Acad©mie royale des sciences su©doise a attribu© mardi le prix Nobel de physique 2001 aux Am©ricains Eric A. Cornell et Carl E. Wieman et   l'Allemand Wolfgang Ketterle pour leur "d©couverte d'un nouvel ©tat de la mati¨re, le condensat de Bose-Einstein". Mis en ligne le 09 octobre 2001 Pour aller plus loin Les 100 ans du prix Nobel Le prix Nobel de m©decine 2001 attribu©   une ©quipe anglo-am©ricaine On trouve de tout sur la liste Nobel Le prix Nobel de physique 2001 a ©t© attribu© mardi conjointement   Eric A. Cornell (Etats-Unis), Wolfgang Ketterle (Allemagne) et

23. SLAC Library Conferences Experiments Institutions
ketterle, wolfgang (MIT) PAPERS EXPTS STUDENTS Update your record Ph.D. institutionMunich U. (1986) Undergrad Munich, Tech. U. ketterle@mit.edu nobel
http://usparc.ihep.su/spires/find/hepnames/www?note=nobel prize&sequence=note(d)

24. PhysicsWeb - Condensates Reap Nobel Reward
which they confirmed a year later and in September 1995 wolfgang ketterle andco Last month the Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the 2001 nobel Prize for
http://physicsweb.org/article/world/14/11/8

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Next Condensates reap Nobel reward
News: November 2001 The creation of the first Bose-Einstein condensate in a gas has been rewarded with the Nobel Prize for Physics just six years after the breakthrough was made. In 1924 the Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose sent a paper to Einstein in which he derived the Planck law for black-body radiation by treating the photons as a gas of identical particles. Einstein arranged for Bose's paper to be translated into German and published. He also extended Bose's calculations to particles with mass and showed that, at sufficiently low temperatures, they would all condense into the same quantum ground state. And for the next 70 years physicists struggled to make a Bose-Einstein condensate - which is sometimes called the fifth state of matter - in the laboratory.
All smiles
Then, in 1990, Carl Wieman of the University of Colorado hired Eric Cornell to work on the problem at the JILA laboratory in Boulder, which is jointly operated by the university and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Finally, at 10.54 a.m. on 5 June 1995, Cornell, Wieman and co-workers managed to achieve Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) in a gas of ultracold rubidium atoms.

25. PhysicsWeb - Nobel Prize For Bose Condensates
The centennial nobel Prize for Physics has been awarded to the researchers Instituteof Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado, wolfgang ketterle of the
http://physicsweb.org/article/news/5/10/5/1

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Previous News for October 2001 Next Nobel Prize for Bose condensates
9 October 2001 The centennial Nobel Prize for Physics has been awarded to the researchers who created the first Bose-Einstein condensates - the so-called fifth state of matter - in the laboratory. Eric Cornell of JILA and National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado, Wolfgang Ketterle of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Carl Wieman of JILA and the University of Colorado, share the 2001 prize for "the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates".
Bose-Einstein condensation was first predicted in 1924 by the Indian physicist, Satyendra Nath Bose, and Albert Einstein. In a Bose condensate the de Broglie wavelength of the atoms is comparable with the average interatomic spacing, which causes all the atoms to condense into the same quantum ground state. All the atoms are described by the same quantum wavefunction, which gives the condensate many unusual properties. Cornell, Wieman and colleagues in Boulder produced the first condensate in an ultracold gas of rubidium atoms in 1995. Later that year Ketterle and co-workers at MIT achieved condensation in a gas of sodium atoms. Since then there has been an explosion of interest in Bose condensation as physicists have probed the properties of this unique state of matter. Bose condensates have been used to produce atom lasers - laser-like beams in which photons are replaced by atoms - and study fundamental processes such as superfluidity.

26. Nobel Awarded For Condensates - November, 2001
Swedish Academy of Sciences /B in Stockholm has awarded the 2001 nobel Prize inphysics to Eric A. Cornell, Carl E. Wieman and wolfgang ketterle for their
http://www.photonics.com/spectra/news/XQ/ASP/pbullid.393/QX/read.htm

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November 2001 Edition Send News to photonics@laurin.com or submit online here Sponsored by: Nobel Awarded for Condensates The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm has awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in physics to Eric A. Cornell, Carl E. Wieman and Wolfgang Ketterle for their creation of Bose-Einstein condensates. The researchers will share the $943,000 prize, which will be presented at the 100th anniversary celebration of the prizes in Stockholm on Dec. 10.    Bose-Einstein condensates, predicted by Albert Einstein based on the calculations of Satyendra Nath Bose, are groups of atoms that are so cold that they are in the same quantum mechanical state, forming a single so-called superatom. In 1995, Cornell and Wieman succeeded in creating a rubidium condensate, using a magneto-optical technique to trap and cool 2000 atoms to a temperature of 20 nK. Independently that same year, Ketterle generated a condensate of sodium.    Cornell is a senior scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colo., and a professor adjoint at the

27. FEATURE STORY: The 2001 Nobel Prize In Physics: A New State Of Matter
More information about wolfgang ketterle http//rleweb.mit.edu/rlestaff/pkett.htm.1997 Physics Laureates at the nobel e-Museum http//www.nobel.se/physics
http://www.discover.com/nov_01/feat_nobel.html
FEATURE STORY:
The 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics:
A New State of Matter
By Solana Pyne
Nearly 80 years ago Albert Einstein and his colleague Satyendra Nath Bose predicted a quirky and unfamiliar state of matter, in which frigid atoms cease to act as individual particles but instead condense into a single wavelike entity. Most physicists believed the theory, but it took 70 years to actually force atoms into this state. In 1995, scientists supercooled rubidium atoms, creating the first so-called Bose-Einstein condensate. Now, a fleeting six years after this initial success, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded the Nobel Prize in physics to the scientists who created and elaborated on these first condensates. Two of the recipients, Carl Wieman of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Eric Cornell of the National Institutes of Standards and Technology in Boulder, were the first to successfully trap and cool atoms to the point where they formed a Bose-Einstein condensate. (See Discover's January 1996 article on this at http://208.245.156.153/archive/outputgo.cfm?ID=668

28. University Of Heidelberg
9 October 2001 The nobel Prize for wolfgang ketterle is also a major honourand token of recognition for the University of Heidelberg . Rector Prof.
http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/press/news/press158_e.html
Home Press Office Press Releases 9 October 2001 "The Nobel Prize for Wolfgang Ketterle is also a major honour and token of recognition for the University of Heidelberg" It was with major gratification that the Rector of the University of Heidelberg, Prof. Dr. Peter Hommelhoff, welcomed the news that Wolfgang Ketterle, formerly of Heidelberg University's Institute of Physical Chemistry, is to be one of the recipients of this years Nobel Prize for physics. "The Nobel Prize for Wolfgang Ketterle is also a major honour and token of recognition for the University of Heidelberg," Hommelhoff said, going on to extend his warmest congratulations to the new laureate. During his Heidelberg years, Ketterle and Institute director, Prof. Dr. Jürgen Wolfrum, conducted the first-ever experiments for visualising pollutant formation in motor engines. In the framework of the "Rhine-Neckar Round Table Meetings" between the University and economic enterprises in the region, Ketterle, Wolfrum and the Proxitronic company embarked on a collaboration that finally developed a technology for high-speed photography in motor engines using a relatively inexpensive camera. Ketterle then successfully employed this technology in producing two-dimensional Bose-Einstein condensates at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). It is for this achievement that he has been awarded the Nobel Prize. "Heidelberg University's many contacts in the field of applied research has here made an essential contribution to excellent progress in basic research," commented Rector Hommelhoff.

29. ONR-Supported Nobel Laureates
to recognize the achievements of 3 more ONRsponsored nobel Laureates for JILA andNIST); Carl Wieman (JILA and University of Colorado); wolfgang ketterle (MIT).
http://www.onr.navy.mil/events/nobels/default.htm
ONR-Supported Nobel Laureates ONR is pleased to recognize the achievements of 3 more ONR-sponsored Nobel Laureates "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates."
  • Eric Cornell (JILA and NIST) Carl Wieman (JILA and University of Colorado) Wolfgang Ketterle (MIT)
View a video-interview with Wolfgang Ketterle
(you may need Windows Media Player to view) Transcript of video View a list of all 2001 Nobel Prize winners
All ONR- Sponsored Nobel Laureates Felix Bloch - (Physics, 1952)
For developing techniques of magnetic measurement in atomic nuclei.
General Applications: Magnetic resonance imagery
Naval Applications: Naval medicine; nondestructive inspection Linus Pauling - (Chemistry, 1954)
For research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances.
General Applications: Modern physical chemistry; modern biochemistry

30. French-American Innovation Day
wolfgang ketterle is a fellow of the American physical society and of the American 1999),the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics (2000), and the nobel Prize in
http://www.france-science.org/faid/bio.asp?speaker=ketterle

31. L'Università Di Trento Coinvolta Nel Nobel Per La Fisica
Translate this page Gli anni di amicizia e di collaborazione con Eric Cornell, wolfgang ketterle e CarlWieman, vincitori del Premio nobel 2001 per la fisica, coincidono con il
http://www.unitn.it/unitn/numero36/nobel_fisica.html
n o ricerca L'Università di Trento coinvolta nel Nobel per la fisica
di Sandro Stringari Gli anni di amicizia e di collaborazione con Eric Cornell, Wolfgang Ketterle e Carl Wieman, vincitori del Premio Nobel 2001 per la fisica, coincidono con il periodo più intenso e stimolante della mia vita scientifica. L’avventura iniziò nel giugno del 1995, quando in una conferenza tenutasi a Mont Ste Odile, vicino a Strasburgo, Eric Cornell e Carl Wieman presentarono i risultati dell’esperimento completato poche settimane prima a Boulder in Colorado. L’impatto di quella presentazione fu enorme e la comunità dei fisici, radunati in un convento in cima alla montagna, percepì immediatamente che stava vivendo un momento importante della storia della fisica. Ricordo che Wolfgang stava seduto in disparte durante la presentazione, ascoltando in silenzio e meditando le mosse che avrebbe effettuato di lì a poche settimane. E in effetti la realizzazione della condensazione di Bose-Einstein (BEC) nel suo laboratorio al Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) avvenne subito dopo e fu pubblicata nel mese di settembre. In realtà il mio primo incontro con Eric Cornell ebbe luogo due anni prima, nel 1993, a Levico Terme in occasione di una conferenza internazionale che organizzai sulla condensazione di BoseEinstein. La mia prima collaborazione scientifica con Eric e Wolfgang ebbe luogo nel marzo del 1996 quando a una conferenza a Les Houches, vicino a Chamonix, presentai i risultati delle mie ricerche sulle oscillazioni collettive nei condensati. Discussi a lungo con loro ed entrambi confermarono che sarebbe stato facile realizzare l’esperimento e verificare le predizioni teoriche; e in effetti fu così. Realizzarono rapidamente l’esperimento (Cornell e Wieman a Boulder e Ketterle al MIT) e riuscirono a pubblicare i risultati a tempo di record nel giro di pochissime settimane. Gli esperimenti confermarono la teoria e il lavoro trentino sulle oscillazioni collettive ebbe grande impatto nella comunità scientifica. Da allora ebbe inizio uno scambio continuo di informazioni scientifiche che ha legato e lega tuttora Trento con i laboratori del Colorado e del MIT. Grazie a queste interazioni Ketterle ed io decidemmo di scrivere un articolo di divulgazione scientifica sulla rivista inglese

32. Nobel Per La Fisica A Cornell, Wiemann E Ketterle
Translate this page Gli americani Eric Cornell e Carl Wieman e il tedesco wolfgang ketterle hanno vintoil nobel per la fisica 2001 per “la realizzazione della condensazione di
http://www.unitn.it/unitn/numero35/nobelfisica.html
n o finestra sull'informazione Nobel per la fisica a Cornell, Wiemann e Ketterle
La collaborazione dell’Università di Trento con i fisici premiati
Gli americani Eric Cornell e Carl Wieman e il tedesco Wolfgang Ketterle hanno vinto il Nobel per la fisica 2001 per “la realizzazione della condensazione di Bose-Einstein nelle nuvole gassose di atomi alcalini” e per la spiegazione di alcuni comportamenti di questo stato della materia. Alcuni quotidiani nazionali e locali hanno evidenziato la collaborazione della ricerca italiana con il gruppo dei vincitori del Nobel, ed in particolare il legame con gli esperimenti svolti da Sandro Stringari, del Dipartimento di Fisica dell’Università di Trento.
Un “pezzo” di Nobel anche a Trento titola L’Adige l’intervista a Sandro Stringari, docente di meccanica quantistica e uno dei massimi esperti mondiali in questo campo di ricerca, dove viene sottolineato che Cornell e Wieman sono stati ospiti in passato dell’Università di Trento e hanno lavorato a stretto contatto con Stringari. Il Sole 24 ore ha ricordato come i premi Nobel siano lo specchio di un lavoro che coinvolge molti ricercatori tra i quali è stato citato Stringari dell’Università di Trento e dell’Istituto Nazionale di Fisica della Materia, oltre a Massimo Inguscio del laboratorio Lens di Firenze.

33. Physics Today December 2001
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has selected Eric A. Cornell, wolfgang ketterle,and Carl E. Wieman to receive the 2001 nobel Prize in Physics for the
http://www.physicstoday.com/pt/vol-54/iss-12/p14.html
Back to Table of Contents Also This Month: Cornell, Ketterle, and Wieman Share Nobel Prize for Bose-Einstein Condensates Isotopic Analysis of Pristine Microshells Resolves a Troubling Paradox of Paleoclimatology Can Polymeric Carbon-60 Be Magnetic? Site Index Physics Today Home Page Current Issue Past Contents Job Ads Upcoming Meetings Buyer's Guide About Physics Today Contact Us Advertising Information Print Ad Rates and Specs Online Ad Rates and Specs Advertiser Index Product Information Information Exchange Cornell, Ketterle, and Wieman Share Nobel Prize for Bose-Einstein Condensates
Macroscopic quantum states of atomic gases, created in 1995, have more than lived up to initial expectations, with journals still bulging with reports of their fascinating behavior. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has selected Eric A. Cornell, Wolfgang Ketterle, and Carl E. Wieman to receive the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates." The three will collect their awards in Stockholm amid more than the usual fanfare, because this year is the centennial of the prize. Cornell is a staff scientist at NIST in Boulder, Colorado, and adjoint professor of physics at the University of Colorado. Wieman is Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Both he and Cornell are fellows at JILA. Ketterle is the John D. MacArthur Professor of Physics at MIT.

34. Physics Today October 2001
Academy of Sciences has decided to award the nobel Prize in Standards and Technology(NIST), Boulder, Colorado, USA, wolfgang ketterle Massachusetts Institute
http://www.physicstoday.com/pt/vol-54/iss-10/nobel.html
Back to Table of Contents Further Links: Nobel museum Site Index Physics Today Home Page Current Issue Past Contents Job Ads Upcoming Meetings Buyer's Guide About Physics Today Contact Us Advertising Information Print Ad Rates and Specs Online Ad Rates and Specs Advertiser Index Product Information Information Exchange Readings from the Physics Today Archive Related to the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2001 jointly to
Eric A. Cornell

JILA and National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Boulder, Colorado, USA,
Wolfgang Ketterle

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA,
and Carl E. Wieman
JILA and University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA,
"for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates". Below is a collection of Physics Today articles that provide background to the award.

35. C&EN: NEWS OF THE WEEK - COLD ATOMS ARE HOT, HOT, HOT
condensate has so rocked the physics world that the nobel committee awarded Technology,both in Boulder, and MIT physics professor wolfgang ketterle, 43, will
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/topstory/7942/7942notw3.html
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Carl E. Wieman Eric A. Cornell Wolfgang Ketterle E-mail this article to a friend ... E-mail the editor IN BRIEF:
DUTCH TREAT E. W. (Bert) Meijer , an organic chemistry professor at Eindhoven University of Technology, is one of four winners of this year's NWO/Spinoza Prize, known as the "Dutch Nobel Prize." Each winner will receive approximately $1.4 million for research from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). Meijer's work concerns dendrimers and supramolecular polymers. Meijer PHOTO BY MICHAEL FREEMANTLE Table of Contents News of the Week Cover Story Editor's Page ... Science/Technology Concentrates Business Science/Technology Education ACS News ... Chemcyclopedia Back Issues
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NOBEL PRIZE
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Volume 79, Number 42
CENEAR 79 42 p. 7
ISSN 0009-2347 [Previous Story] [Next Story] COLD ATOMS ARE HOT, HOT, HOT Physics Nobel goes to discoverers of Bose-Einstein condensates ELIZABETH WILSON Nobel Prizes are frequently awarded to older scientists, after the significance of their work has had a chance to really sink in. But the creation, a little over five years ago, of an exotic form of matter known as the Bose-Einstein condensate has so rocked the physics world that the Nobel committee awarded this year's prize in physics to a group of relative youngsters.

36. ScienceDaily News Release: Nobel Prize In Physics Goes To Discovers Of New State
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the nobel Prize in of Standardsand Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colorado; wolfgang ketterle, of the
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/10/011009070037.htm
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Nobel Prize In Physics Goes To Discovers Of New State Of Matter: Bose-Einstein Condensate
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2001 jointly to Eric A. Cornell , of JILA* and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colorado; Wolfgang Ketterle , of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts; and Carl E. Wieman , of JILA and the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado, "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates." New State of Matter Revealed: Bose-Einstein Condensate A laser beam differs from the light from an ordinary light bulb in several ways. In the laser the light particles all have the same energy and oscillate together. To cause matter also to behave in this controlled way has long been a challenge for researchers. This year's Nobel Laureates have succeeded – they have caused atoms to "sing in unison" – thus discovering a new state of matter, the Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC).

37. Nobel Fizik Ödülü’nü 3 Kiþi Paylaþtý
Eric A. Cornell, Carl E. Wieman ve Alman wolfgang ketterle, bulduklari maddeninyeni üretilmesine yol açabilecek ultrasoguk gaz) 2001 nobel Fizik Ödülü
http://www.ntvmsnbc.com/news/111648.asp
Maddenin yeni bir halini keþfeden 2 Amerikalý ve bir Alman bilim adamý, bu yýlki ödüle layýk görüldü. Stockholm
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nobel Týp ödülü sahiplerini buldu
2001: Eric Cornell (ABD), Wolfgang Ketterle (Almanya), Carl Wieman (ABD) 2000: Zhores Alferov (Rusya), Herbert Kroemer (ABD), Jack Kilby (ABD) 1999: Gerardus 't Hooft (Hollanda), Martinus Veltman (Hollanda) 1998: Robert B. Laughlin (ABD), Horst L. Stoermer (Almanya), Daniel C. Tsui (ABD) 1997: Steven Chu (ABD), Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (Fransa), William D. Phillips (ABD) 1996: David M. Lee (ABD), Douglas D. Osheroff (ABD), Robert C. Richardson (ABD) 1995: Martin L. Perl (ABD), Frederick Reines (ABD) 1994: Bertram N. Brockhouse (Kanada), Clifford G. Shull (ABD) 1993: Russell A. Hulse (ABD), Joseph H. Taylor (ABD) 1992: Georges Charpak (Fransa) 1991 Pierre-Gilles de Gennes (Fransa)
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38. AAAS Annual Meeting - MEETING PROGRAM + EVENTS
wolfgang ketterle, who was jointly awarded The nobel Prize in Physicswill give a Topical Lecture at the 2002 AAAS Annual Meeting.
http://www.aaas.org/meetings/2002/MPE_news_01.shtml
"This year's Nobel laureates have succeeded they have caused atoms to 'sing in unison' thus discovering a new state of matter," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a statement. Wolfgang Ketterle , who was jointly awarded The Nobel Prize in Physics will give a Topical Lecture at the 2002 AAAS Annual Meeting. Ketterle, a professor of Physics at MIT, will speak on the topic of "Bose-Einstein Condensates: Matter Made of Matter Waves" Saturday, February 16 at 8:00am Physicists Wolfgang Ketterle, Eric Cornell, and Carl Wieman received the Nobel Prize "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of condensates." Specifically, from gases of rubidium, sodium and other alkali metals, these scientists created "superparticles," or Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs), which exhibit unique physical properties. Their work set the stage for atomic lasers and other technological and fundamental advances.

39. Nobel Laureates
quark model in particle physics. jif@MIT.EDU. wolfgang ketterle, 2001Nobel Laureate in Physics. for the achievement of BoseEinstein
http://www.jcjc.edu/org/ajas/archives/nobel_laureates.htm
A merican J unior A cademy of S ciences HOME Back to Boston 2002 SHELDON L. GLASHOW
1979 Nobel Laureate in Physics for their contributions to the theory of the unified weak and electromagnetic interaction between elementary particles, including inter alia the prediction of the weak neutral current.
lg@bu.edu
DAVID H. HUBEL 1981 Nobel Laureate in Medicine for their discoveries concerning information processing in the visual system. david_hubel@hms.harvard.edu DUDLEY R. HERSCHBACH 1986 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry for their work on "reaction dynamics"
herschbach@chemistry.harvard.edu JEROME I. FRIEDMAN 1990 Nobel Laureate in Physics for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics.
jif@MIT.EDU
WOLFGANG KETTERLE Nobel Laureate in Physics for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates.

40. Science Celebrates The 2001 Nobel Physics Laureates
Much of the pioneering work on these potentially revolutionary devices was executedby 2001 nobel Laureate wolfgang ketterle and his group at MIT, and appeared
http://www.physi.uni-heidelberg.de/~schmiedm/seminar/MacQuSyst2001/PhysNobPrize/
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New Tricks: Squeezing, Superfluid Vortices, and Metastable States

he 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to Wolfgang Ketterle, Eric Cornell, and Carl Wieman , for their groundbreaking mid-1990s work in condensed-matter studies. Using revolutionary laser-cooling techniques pioneered by Stephen Chu, William Phillips, and Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (who themselves shared the 1997 physics prize for that work), the 2001 awardees were the first to succeed in cooling collections of bosonic particles such as rubidium and sodium atoms to the point where they share the same quantum state, and thereby behave as a single, giant particle. Achieving this weird state of matter, the existence of which was predicted by Satyendra Bose and Albert Einstein in the mid-1920s, had been a holy grail of physicists for seven decades. And the work of the three 2001 Nobel Laureates has catalyzed an amazing period of progress in condensed-matter physics. Science is proud to have played a key role in this seminal pathway of intellectual development. Beginning with publication of the landmark first observation by Cornell and Wieman in the 14 July 1995, the journal has remained at the forefront of Bose-Einstein condensate studies and the many implications of this extreme state of matter from atom lasers to the first observations of Fermi degeneracy to the most recent studies in the weird behavior of BECs. To celebrate the accomplishment of the 2001 Nobel Physics Laureates, we present a roundup of some of the research papers in

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