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         Rubbia Carlo:     more books (16)
  1. EL DILEMA NUCLEAR by Carlo Rubbia con Nino criscenti, 1989-01-01
  2. Nobel Dreams: Power, Deceit and the Ultimate Experiment by Gary Taubes, 1988-01

21. Un Nobel De Física Apuesta Por Los Motores De Hidrógeno
Translate this page Motores. 21 de Octubre de 2002 carlo rubbia Un nobel de Física apuestapor los motores de hidrógeno. El Premio nobel de Física
http://elmundomotor.elmundo.es/elmundomotor/2002/10/18/tecnica/1034955301.html
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Motores
21 de Octubre de 2002
CARLO RUBBIA
Un Nobel de Física apuesta por los motores de hidrógeno
El Premio Nobel de Física italiano Carlo Rubbia ha asegurado que es «indispensable el desarrollo de automóviles con motores de hidrógeno».
ELMUNDOMOTOR
ADEMAS Así funciona un coche con hidrógeno
Dos grandes grupos

"Encontrar fuentes de energía alternativas al petróleo es fundamental, ya que estamos agotando las reservas del planeta", afirma Rubbia en unas declaraciones que recoge la prensa italiana. Rubbia forma parte de un grupo de investigación integrado por expertos italianos, españoles y alemanes para desarrollar motores de hidrógeno en colaboración con casas automovilísticas como Mercedes, Ford o Renault. El Nobel, que es también presidente de la Organización italiana para las Nuevas Tecnologías, Energía y Medio Ambiente (ENEA) cree importante desarrollar la energía del hidrógeno e invertir en ella, "como lo han hecho ya países como EEUU o Japón, donde la inversión en este sector supera los 200 millones de euros anuales". El coste de los automóviles de hidrógeno es por ahora treinta veces superior al de los convencionales, ya que los primeros son casi un producto artesanal. Sin embargo, Rubbia defiende sus ventajas medioambientales frente a "factores simplemente económicos", ya que la contaminación es menor y el hidrógeno es una fuente de energía inagotable, lo que no sucede con el petróleo.

22. Rubbia, Carlo. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
rubbia, carlo. of Rome and later at Harvard, rubbia did his most important work with Fortheir discovery, the pair was awarded the 1984 nobel Prize in Physics.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ru/Rubbia-C.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Rubbia, Carlo

23. Rubbia, Carlo. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language: Fourt
rubbia, carlo. SYLLABICATION Rub·bi·a. PRONUNCIATION r b , r byä. DATESBorn 1934. Italian physicist. He shared a 1984 nobel Prize for the discovery of
http://www.bartleby.com/61/38/R0333800.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference American Heritage Dictionary rubbery ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. Rubbia, Carlo

24. Rubbia, Carlo
rubbia, carlo 1934, Italian physicist, Ph.D. Univ. of Rome and later at HarvardUniv., rubbia did his discovery, the pair was awarded the 1984 nobel Prize in
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    Rubbia, Carlo 1934-, Italian physicist, Ph.D. Univ. of Pisa, 1957. A professor of physics at the Univ. of Rome and later at Harvard Univ., Rubbia did his most important work with Simon van der Meer at the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN; now the European Organization for Nuclear Research). The pair discovered the subatomic particles W and Z, elementary particles
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  • 25. SLAC Library Conferences Experiments Institutions
    CERN Harvard U.) PAPERS EXPTS STUDENTS Update your record Undergrad Pisa,Scuola Normale Superiore carlo.rubbia@cern.ch http//www.nobel.se/physics
    http://usparc.ihep.su/spires/find/hepnames/www?note=nobel prize&sequence=note(d)

    26. NPD RAS Foreign Members
    1982. Panofsky Wolfgang, 24.04.1919, USA, 1988. rubbia carlo, 31.03.1934, Italy,1988. nobel Laureate 1984. Ting Samuel, 27.01.1936, USA, 1988. nobel Laureate1976.
    http://www.ruhep.ru/npd/foreinm.npd/fornmm_e.htm
    FOREIGN MEMBERS of RUSSIAN ACADEMY of SCIENCES
    ELECTED THROUGH ITS NUCLEAR PHYSICS DEPARTMENT
    Born   Country Year of election Nobel Laureate Pal Lenard Hungary Weisskopf Victor Frederick USA Menon Mambillikalathil Govind Kumar USA Nguen Van Hieu Viet-Nam Nishijima Kazuhiko Japan Panofsky Wolfgang USA Rubbia Carlo Italy Nobel Laureate 1984 Ting Samuel USA Nobel Laureate 1976 Zhou Guanzhao China Bethe Hans Albrecht USA Nobel Laureate 1967 Charpak Georges France Nobel Laureate 1992 Gell-Mann Murray USA Nobel Laureate 1969 Glashow Sheldon Lee USA Nobel Laureate 1979 Yang Chen Ning USA Nobel Laureate 1957 Maiani Luciano Italy Telegdi Valentine-Louis USA

    27. Nobel Physics Prize - Press Release 1984
    17 October 1984 The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the NobelPrize in Physics for 1984 jointly to Professor carlo rubbia, CERN, Geneva
    http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1984/press.html

    28. Physics 1984
    nobel Prize in Physics 19012000 http//www.nobel.se, The nobel Prize inPhysics 1984. carlo rubbia, Simon van der Meer. Italy, the Netherlands.
    http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1984/

    29. Rubbia, Carlo
    rubbia, carlo (1934). I was born in the small town of Gorizia, Italy,on 31 March, 1934. From nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990.
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/R/Rubbia/1.html
    Rubbia, Carlo
    I was born in the small town of Gorizia, Italy, on 31 March, 1934. My father was an electrical engineer at the local telephone company and my mother an elementary school teacher. At the end of the World War II most of the province of Gorizia was overtaken by Yugoslavia and my family fled to Venice first and then to Udine.
    As a boy, I was deeply interested in scientific ideas, electrical and mechanical, and I read almost everything I could find on the subject. I was attracted more by the hardware and construction aspects than by the scientific issues. At that time I could not decide if science or technology were more relevant for me.
    Soon after my degree, in 1958 I went to the United States to enlarge my experience and to familiarize myself with particle accelerators. I spent about one and a half years at Columbia University. Together with W. Baker, we measured at the Nevis Syncro-cyclotron the angular asymmetry in the capture of polarized muons, demonstrating the presence of parity violation in this fundamental process. This was his first of a long series of experiments on Weak Interactions, which ever since has become my main field of interest. Of course at that time it would have been quite unthinkable for me to imagine to be one day amongst the people discovering the quanta of the weak field!

    30. Il Presidente Dell'ENEA, Premio Nobel Per La Fisica Carlo Rubbia, In Cina Per Un
    Translate this page Una delegazione italiana, guidata dal premio nobel per la Fisica carlo rubbia, Presidentedell'ENEA, si è recata in Cina in occasione di un workshop che si
    http://www.grtv.it/2000/giugno2000/09giugno2000/enea.htm
    Workshop Italia-Cina per la produzione di Idrogeno da combustibili fossili (GRTV) Pechino, 8-9 giugno 2000. Una delegazione italiana, guidata dal premio Nobel per la Fisica Carlo Rubbia, Presidente dell'ENEA, si è recata in Cina in occasione di un workshop che si svolge a Pechino nei giorni 8 e 9 giugno, nell'ambito di un accordo di collaborazione tecnico-scientifica tra i due Paesi, per illustrare la possibilità di avviare una collaborazione in campo energetico per la produzione di idrogeno da combustibili fossili, al fine di contenere i livelli di inquinamento legati alla crescente domanda energetica, contribuendo ad uno sviluppo globale ambientalmente più sostenibile. Nel corso dei lavori vengono discussi i rispettivi punti di vista sulle diverse fonti energetiche disponibili e sulle più avanzate tecnologie per tracciare uno scenario energetico caratterizzato dall'idrogeno, come vettore energetico ad inquinamento "zero". A differenza dell'Italia che utilizza prevalentemente metano e petrolio per il proprio fabbisogno energetico, la Cina utilizza come fonte di energia in larga misura il carbone, di cui ha ampia disponibilità. L'uso del carbone comporta però ingenti emissioni di sostanze inquinanti, soprattutto di CO2, uno dei principali gas ad effetto serra. Le esigenze di sviluppo e l'aumento crescente della popolazione richiederanno inoltre maggiori consumi energetici la cui produzione, a partire dal carbone, comporterà un aumento rilevante dell'inquinamento, vanificando quanto stabilito dai recenti protocolli di accordo sulla tutela dell'ambiente e sulla riduzione dei gas ad effetto serra (protocollo di Kyoto).

    31. Carlo Rubbia
    Translate this page carlo rubbia. rubbia, carlo (Gorizia 1934), fisico italiano. Per la scoperta dei bosoniWe Z0 rubbia ha ricevuto il premio nobel per la fisica nel 1984
    http://space.tin.it/scienza/llpassal/rubbia.html
    La Fisica delle particelle elementari CARLO RUBBIA Rubbia, Carlo (Gorizia 1934), fisico italiano. Conclusi gli studi universitari presso l'Università di Pisa (1957), Rubbia si trasferì a New York, dove lavorò per circa un anno alla Columbia University. Proseguì le sue ricerche all'Università La Sapienza di Roma e nel 1960 divenne ricercatore al CERN di Ginevra, il Laboratorio europeo per la fisica delle particelle. Dal 1971 al 1988 fu professore di fisica alla Harvard University, e dal 1990 al 1993 direttore generale del CERN. Nel 1994 ha assunto la direzione dell'International Center for Theoretical Physics di Trieste. a cura di Pio Passalacqua Enrico Fermi Richard Feynman Murray Gell-Mann Sheldon Lee Glashow ... George Zweig

    32. Nobel Italiani
    nobel Italiani. Fisica 1909. More Physics 1984. The prize was awarded jointlyto rubbia, carlo, Italy, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, b. 1934; and.
    http://www.embitalia.org.br/tec32Nobelitaliani.htm
    Nobel Italiani
    Fisica 1909
    MARCONI, GUGLIELMO, Italia (1874 - 1937) e a BRAUN, CARL FERDINAND, Germania (1850 - 1918): "in riconoscimento del loro contributo allo sviluppo della telegrtafia senza fili" More...
    Physics 1938
    FERMI, ENRICO, Italy, Rome University, b. 1901, d. 1954: "for his demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons" More...
    Physics 1959
    The prize was awarded jointly to: CHAMBERLAIN, OWEN, U.S.A., University of California, Berkeley, CA, b. 1920: "for their discovery of the antiproton" More...
    Physics 1984
    The prize was awarded jointly to: RUBBIA, CARLO, Italy, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, b. 1934; and VAN DER MEER, SIMON, the Netherlands, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, b. 1925: "for their decisive contributions to the large project, which led to the discovery of the field particles W and Z, communicators of weak interaction" More...
    Chemistry 1963
    The prize was divided equally between: NATTA, GIULIO, Italy, Institute of Technology, Milan, b. 1903, d. 1979:

    33. CERN Courier - A Wide Span Of Physics - IOP Publishing - Article
    nobel prizewinner in 1984, architect and mason of CERN's biggest ever physics discoveryand directorgeneral of CERN from 1989 to 1993, carlo rubbia remains a
    http://www.cerncourier.com/main/article/39/4/14

    This Issue
    Back Issues Editorial Staff
    Carlo Rubbia
    A wide span of physics Nobel prizewinner in 1984, architect and mason of CERN's biggest ever physics discovery and director-general of CERN from 1989 to 1993, Carlo Rubbia remains a continual fountainhead of new ideas. A recent seminar at CERN highlighted the extent of his work.
    Speakers
    CERN owes a tremendous debt to Carlo Rubbia. His vision foresaw a gleaming new SPS proton synchrotron transformed into a proton­ antiproton collider, the springboard for discovering the W and Z particles, the carriers of the weak force. With this discovery, CERN moved to the centre of the world physics stage. At a special seminar at CERN on 16 March, director-general Luciano Maiani pointed out that Rubbia's vision brought the W and Z particles into the reach of physics much earlier than would otherwise have been possible.
    The birthday seminar focused on science, but CERN's debt to Rubbia extends much wider. When he took over from Herwig Schopper as CERN director-general on 1 January 1989, the LEP electron­positron collider had not yet come into operation, research and development work on superconducting magnets for the proposed LHC proton collider was just beginning, and CERN had 14 Member States: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, the German Federal Republic, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK.
    The LHC road had already been chosen in 1986 as the main thrust of CERN's scientific advance by the CERN Long Range Planning Committee, chaired by Rubbia. The route to higher electron­positron collision energies through a purpose-built linear collider (CLIC; CERN Linear Collider) was also acknowledged at that time.

    34. Prémios Nobel
    e os seus Prémios nobel rubbia, carlo, Italy, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1934;and VAN DER MEER, SIMON, the Netherlands, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1925
    http://pintopc.home.cern.ch/pintopc/www/divers/Premio_nobel.html
    * Physics 1976 - The prize was divided equally between: RICHTER, BURTON, U.S.A., Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, CA, * 1931;
    TING, SAMUEL C. C., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, (CERN - European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), * 1936:
    "for their pioneering work in the discovery of a heavy elementary particle of a new kind". - The prize was awarded jointly to: RUBBIA, CARLO, Italy, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1934; and
    VAN DER MEER, SIMON, the Netherlands, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1925:
    "for their decisive contributions to the large project, which led to the discovery of the field particles W and Z, communicators of weak interaction". * Physics 1998 - The prize was awarded jointly to: LEDERMAN, LEON M., U.S.A., Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, IL, * 1922;
    SCHWARTZ, MELVIN, U.S.A., Digital Pathways, Inc., Mountain View, CA, * 1932; and
    STEINBERGER, JACK, U.S.A., CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, * 1921 (in Bad Kissingen, FRG):
    "for the neutrino beam method and the demonstration of the doublet structure of the leptons through the discovery of the muon neutrino".

    35. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
    The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences gave the nobel Prize in physics to carlo rubbia,50, of Italy, a professor at Harvard University, and Simon van der Meer
    http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1984/1984l.html

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    AMERICAN GETS NOBEL IN CHEMISTRY; PHYSICS GOES TO 2 EUROPEANS
    Author: Associated Press Date: Thursday, October 18, 1984
    Page:
    Section:
    NATIONAL/FOREIGN An American biochemist yesterday won the 1984 Nobel Prize in chemistry for research that led to safer medication, and the prize in physics was awarded to an Italian-Dutch team of nuclear physicists who found particles scientists had sought for 50 years. The chemistry prize went to R. Bruce Merrifield, 63, of Rockefeller University in New York. He was honored for work he did in the 1950s and 1960s, developing a new method of synthesizing amino acid compounds called peptides, which has revolutionized the manufacture of drugs such as high blood pressure medicine, insulin and other hormone medications, and has been used in gene technology. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences gave the Nobel Prize in physics to Carlo Rubbia, 50, of Italy, a professor at Harvard University, and Simon van der Meer, 59, of the Netherlands, for discovering the W and Z subatomic particles that are believed to carry one of nature's four basic forces - the ''weak interaction force" - in much the same way that photons carry light. The other natural forces are atomic interaction, electromagnetism and gravitation. Physicists have been working since the atom smasher was developed in the 1930s to prove that the four forces actually are one, Albert Einstein's ''unification theory."

    36. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
    Other expeditions saw the tracks, said Dr. George Brandenburg yesterday of theNobel Prizewinning work of his Harvard University colleague, carlo rubbia.
    http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1984/1984m.html

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    RUBBIA'S PRIZE NO SURPRISE,
    COLLEAGUES AT HARVARD SAY
    Author: By Paul Duke Jr., Special to The Globe Date: Thursday, October 18, 1984
    Page: Section: METRO "Other expeditions saw the tracks," said Dr. George Brandenburg yesterday of the Nobel Prize-winning work of his Harvard University colleague, Carlo Rubbia. "This one found the skeletons." Rubbia is a physics professor at Harvard, where he teaches when not at CERN, the European nuclear research facility. His Harvard colleagues applauded the award yesterday, calling Rubbia's work some of the most important ever attempted in physics. They also said that the prize was not a surprise. "This discovery was so dramatic it was hard to believe he wouldn't get the prize," said Prof. Sheldon Glashow, chairman of physics department. Other colleagues called Rubbia a "visionary" and "audacious," a scientist who has "more ideas in a year than most physicists have in a productive lifetime." "We're very proud of him," said Glashow, one of three who shared the 1979 Nobel Prize for physics. "He is an ebullient, flamboyant go-getter, perhaps the only scientist in the world with the drive to push something like this through."

    37. Carlo Rubbia - Wikipedia
    The following year, 1984, carlo rubbia and Simon van der Meer shared the nobel prizefor physics, one of the shortest intervals ever between discovery and award
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Rubbia
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    Carlo Rubbia
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Carlo Rubbia was born in the small town of Gorizia Italy , in . After high school, he studied in the Faculty of Physics at the Scuola Normale in Pisa where he completed a thesis about cosmic ray experiments. In , he went to the United States to widen his experience and to familiarize himself with particle accelerators Around , he moved back to Europe , attracted by the newly founded CERN where he worked on experiments on the structure of weak interactions. In , he suggested adapting CERN 's Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) to collide protons and antiprotons in the same ring and the world's first antiproton factory was built. The collider started running in

    38. PhysicsWeb - Carlo Rubbia And The Discovery Of The W And The Z
    again, the Italian particle physicist carlo rubbia was pacing and Goliath story wasone of rubbia's favourite metaphors chapter 7 of his book nobel Dreams Power
    http://physicsweb.org/article/world/16/1/8

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    Next Carlo Rubbia and the discovery of the W and the Z
    Feature: January 2003 Some 20 years ago the W and Z bosons were the biggest prizes in particle physics, and Carlo Rubbia and the UA1 experiment at CERN won the race to find them ONE summer night in 1982, about a month before the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) at CERN was due to start colliding beams again, the Italian particle physicist Carlo Rubbia was pacing up and down. He had a newspaper in his hand, and he was waving it around and raving at a colleague. The newspaper was French and the article that had upset him was about the forthcoming experimental run at the SPS. Not surprisingly the article described the two experiments at the collider called UA1 and UA2 from a French point of view. According to the newspaper, UA2 was the French hope, while UA1 was a juggernaut belonging to CERN and Italy (even though three of the labs in the UA1 collaboration were French). The article portrayed UA2 as a small experiment, clever and cute. UA2 was David. UA1 was big, ugly and expensive not the kind of experiment you would build if you were going to do the physics of the decade. UA1 was Goliath. And it was pretty clear which experiment this French paper expected to succeed.

    39. INVENTION.CH - Projects
    Translate this page Neuf ans après sa proposition d'un nouveau type de réacteur nucléaire,le Prix nobel italien carlo rubbia lance un nouveau pavé dans la mare.
    http://www.invention.ch/presse/carlo-rubbia.htm
    Le Nobel de physique Carlo Rubbia propose un type de moteur interplanétaire révolutionnaire Neuf ans après sa proposition d'un nouveau type de réacteur nucléaire, le Prix Nobel italien Carlo Rubbia lance un nouveau pavé dans la mare. Ce spécialiste de la physique des particules sort une nouvelle fois de son domaine et s'attaque cette fois-ci à un nouveau type de propulsion spatiale qui pourrait révolutionner les voyages interplanétaires. Fier comme un pape, et sûr de son effet, Carlo Rubbia énonce d'une voix posée l'intitulé de sa proposition révolutionnaire qui va selon lui raccourcir considérablement les voyages interplanétaires : « propulsion spatiale nucléaire à l'aide d'une poussée purement électromagnétique ». Le Prix Nobel de physique italien a dévoilé son projet à Versailles lors du symposium sur la propulsion spatiale au XXIe siècle, le 15 mai, devant une assemblée de spécialistes. « Ce principe est tellement simple que je m'étonne encore que personne n'y ait pensé avant moi », déclare Carlo Rubbia avec un grand sourire. En fait, le physicien italien semble ignorer que l'ingénieur allemand Eugen Saenger avait déjà imaginé un moteur photonique en 1935, dont la lumière aurait été fournie par une réaction d'annihilation entre de la matière et de l'antimatière, une technologie encore très futuriste. Le principe de pile atomique de Carlo Rubbia semble en comparaison beaucoup plus réalisable. Contrairement à la fusée atomique de Hergé qui emmène Tintin sur la Lune, le moteur de Rubbia n'est pas conçu pour faire décoller une fusée à partir du sol, mais plutôt pour fournir l'énergie nécessaire à un voyage interplanétaire à un vaisseau déjà en orbite autour de la Terre.

    40. Pictures Gallery Of The Nobel Prize Winners In Physics
    Translate this page The nobel Prize in Physics. 1998. Robert B. Laughlin Horst L. Störmer Daniel C.Tsui 1997. 1985. Klaus von Klitzing 1984. carlo rubbia Simon van der Meer 1983.
    http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physpicnobel.html
    The Nobel Prize in Physics
    Robert B. Laughlin
    Daniel C. Tsui
    Steven Chu
    ...
    Hannes Olof Gosta Alfven

    Louis Eugene Felix Neel
    Murray Gell-Mann
    Luis Walter Alvarez
    Hans Albrecht Bethe
    Alfred Kastler
    Richard Phillips Feynman

    Julian Seymour Schwinger

    Sin-Itiro Tomonaga
    Nikolai Gennadievich Basov
    Alexander Mikhailovich Prokhorov

    Charles Hard Townes
    Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen

    Maria Goeppert-Mayer
    ...
    Sir Edward Victor Appleton
    Percy Williams Bridgman
    Wolfgang Ernst Pauli
    Isidor Isaac Rabi
    Otto Stern
    None
    None
    None
    Ernest Orlando Lawrence
    Enrico Fermi
    Clinton Joseph Davisson

    Sir George Paget Thomson
    ...
    Sir James Chadwick
    None
    Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac
    Werner Karl Heisenberg
    None
    Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman
    Prince Louis-Victor Pierre Raymond de Broglie
    Sir Owen Willans Richardson
    Arthur Holly Compton

    Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
    Jean Baptiste Perrin
    James Franck

    Gustav Ludwig Hertz
    Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn
    Robert Andrews Millikan
    ...
    Albert Einstein
    Charles Eduard Guillaume
    Johannes Stark
    Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck
    Charles Glover Barkla
    None
    Sir William Henry Bragg
    Sir William Lawrence Bragg
    Max Theodor Felix von Laue
    Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
    ... Guglielmo Marconi
    Gabriel Jonas Lippmann
    Albert Abraham Michelson
    Sir Joseph John Thomson
    Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard
    John William Strutt (Lord Rayleigh)
    ...
    Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
    Donated by Christopher Walker, University of Ulster

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