Daniel C. Tsui Winner Of The 1998 Nobel Prize In Physics daniel C. tsui, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobel PrizeInternet Archive. daniel C. tsui. 1998 nobel Laureate in Physics http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1998c.html
Extractions: Articles on the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Computer visualization of the fractional hall effect CNN coverage of the award A brief explanation of the Quantum Fractional Hall Effect Some lecture notes on the quantum Hall effects ... The 1998 Franklin Institute Award for Daniel C. Tsui
Index Of Nobel Laureates In Physics Townes, Charles H. 1964. tsui, daniel C. 1998. Back to The nobel Prize InternetArchive Literature * Peace * Chemistry * Physics * Economics * Medicine http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/alpha.html
Daniel C. Tsui - Autobiography daniel C. tsui Autobiography. CN Yang and TD Lee were awarded the nobel Prizefor Physics in 1957 and they both went to the University of Chicago. http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1998/tsui-autobio.html
Extractions: I tend to partition my life into three compartments: childhood years in a remote village in the province of Henan in central China, schooling years in Hong Kong, and the years since I came to attend college in the United States. The only thread connecting them is the kindness, generosity and friendship from the people around me that I have experienced all my life. My childhood memories are filled with the years of drought, flood and war which were constantly on the consciousness of the inhabitants of my over-populated village, but also with my parents' self-sacrificing love and the happy moments they created for me. Like most other villagers, my parents never had the opportunity to learn how to read and write. They suffered from their illiteracy and their suffering made them determined not to have their children follow the same path at any and whatever cost to them. In early 1951, my parents seized the first and perhaps the only opportunity to have me leave them and their village to pursue education in so far away a place that neither they nor I knew how far it truly was. Peking University could leave indelible marks on us. It was they, I think, who in their unconscious ways dared us students, living in a most commercialized city, to look beyond the dollar sign and see the exploration of new frontiers in human knowledge as an intellectually rewarding and challenging pursuit.
Extractions: Date: October 13, 1998 Princeton, N.J. Daniel Chee Tsui, Arthur Legrand Doty Professor of Electrical Engineering, on Tuesday has won the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics for his 1982 discovery with co-winner Horst L. Stormer, now of Columbia University, of the fractional quantum Hall effect. A third co-winner, Robert B. Laughlin, explained their result the following year. The experiments by Tsui and Stormer led to Laughlin's finding that the electrons in a powerful magnetic field can form a quantum fluid, in which "parts" of an electron can be identified. Tsui's work stems from a 1879 finding by a student, Edwin H. Hall, who discovered a pattern in the flow of electric current when a gold plate is placed in a magnetic field at right angles to its surface. The current flowing along the plate would drop at right angles. This phenomenon, termed the Hall effect, can be used to determine the density of charge carriers in conductors and semi-conductors and is a standard tool in physics laboratories. In Hall's day, such experiments were performed at room temperature with moderate magnetic fields. By the 1970s, researchers could perform experiments at extremely low temperatures, with very powerful magnetic fields. The 1980 experiment by Klaus von Klitzing found that the Hall effect in the semiconductor silicon does not behave in a linear fashion, but instead creates "steps" along the strength of the magnetic field (von Klitzig won the 1985 Nobel Prize for this discovery).
Extractions: Date: October 13, 1998 A press conference with Professor Daniel C. Tsui has been scheduled for 2 p.m. at the Engineering Quad, Olden Street, at Princeton University. The room number is C-217. Professor Ravindra Bhatt, director of Program in Engineering Physics, and other colleagues of Professor Tsui's will review his work and make remarks. Professor Tsui will be introduced by Dean of the Faculty Joseph Taylor, a 1993 winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics. Professor Tsui will make very brief remarks. Colleagues and Professor Tsui's graduate students will also be available for interviews. Professor Tsui will then be available for photographs in his laboratory in the Engineering Quad. For directions to the University, call 609-256-2222. From Route 1, take Washington Road to Prospect Street. Turn at the large white building, which is the Wilson School. Drive past the eating clubs and past Olden Street; parking areas will be on your left (areas 1A and 3). The Engineering Quad will be on Olden Street, on your right.
A Citation For Professor Daniel C. Tsui daniel C. tsui. It is no exaggeration to say that Prof. daniel tsui is a name wellknownto all in Hong Kong. In 1998, Prof. tsui was awarded the nobel Prize in http://www.puiching.com/news/e_citation.htm
Extractions: P ROFESSOR D ANIEL C T SUI It is no exaggeration to say that Prof. Daniel Tsui is a name well-known to all in Hong Kong. In 1998, Prof. Tsui was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics along with Prof. Horst L. Stormer and Prof. Robert B. Laughlin. He is the sixth Chinese scientist to ever receive this highest honour in scientific research and the first Nobel laureate who received his secondary education in Hong Kong. Prof. Tsui was born the son of a farmer in 1939 in Henan, China. At the age of 12, he was sent by his parents to live with his two elder sisters in Hong Kong. Since then, he has led a fairly independent life. Unfortunately, he was never to see or be reunited with his parents again. Upon arriving in Hong Kong Prof. Tsui entered Pui Ching Middle School. There were a lot of difficulties adjusting to his new life, including learning Cantonese and making a long journey to school every day. Prof. Tsui took all these in his stride and his strengths were soon apparent. He did extremely well in each and every subject at school. Amiable and modest, humorous and cheerful, he was well loved by all of his classmates. In 1957, Prof. Tsui passed the Chinese High School Certification Examination with a distinguished record. He then enrolled in the Special Classes Centre to prepare for the entrance examination of the University of Hong Kong, then the only university in Hong Kong.
No Title daniel C. tsui, Professor Room B426, Engineering Quadrangle. Biography daniel tsuireceived his Ph.D. in physics from In 1998 he received the nobel prize in http://www.ee.princeton.edu/bios/tsuibio.html
Extractions: Biography: Daniel Tsui received his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago in 1967. He was elected to the National Academy of Science in 1987, is a fellow of the American Physical Society and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a recipient of its Buckley Prize for condensed matter physics. In 1998 he received the Nobel prize in Physics for his discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect and the Benjamin Franklin Award in Physics. Membership in Societies: National Academy of Science, IEEE, American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Physical Society and Materials Research Society. More Research Information Typical Publications: ``Effects of Long-range Potential Fluctuations on Scaling in the Integer Quantum Hall Effect,'' (with H.P. Wei, S.Y. Lin, and A.M. Pruisken)
Department Of Electrical Engineering - Princeton University daniel C. tsui. A demonstration of the fractional quantum Hall effect discoveredby tsui and Störmer, for which they were awarded the nobel Prize in http://www.ee.princeton.edu/people/Tsui.php
Extractions: Ph.D. 1967, University of Chicago My field of research activity is the electrical properties of thin films and microstructures of semiconductors and solid-state physics. My current research at Princeton is on the fundamental properties of electronic materials, especially conduction in ultrasmall structures, transport through heterojunctions, heterojunction transistors, and quantum physics of electronic materials in strong magnetic fields and low temperatures, in particular, the quantum Hall regime (see figure below). Before coming to Princeton sixteen years ago I had thirteen years of research experience in solid-state electronics at Bell Laboratories. H Search this site:
Re: Congratulations To Daniel C. Tsui daniel C. tsui 1998 nobel Laureate in Physics for discovery of anew form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations. http://plato.phy.ohiou.edu/~hong/wwwboard/messages/412.html
Extractions: : : So there is one more "Chinese" Nobel physicist. : : Who knows anything about him? : DANIEL C. TSUI : 1998 Nobel Laureate in Physics : for discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged : excitations. : Background : Born: 1939 : Place of birth: Henan, China : Education: Ph.D. in physics 1967 at University of Chicago : (U.S.A.) : Residence: New Jersey, U.S.A. : Affiliation: Department of Electrical Engineering, : Princeton University, PO Box 5263, Princeton, NJ 08544, : U.S.A. : Phone: 609-258-4621 : Fax: 609-258-6279 : Email: tsui@Princeton.EDU Optional Link URL:
Congratulations To Daniel C. Tsui So there is one more Chinese nobel physicist. Who knows anything about him? FollowUps Re Congratulations to daniel C. tsui Ralphson 220941 10/13/98 (0) http://plato.phy.ohiou.edu/~hong/wwwboard/messages/411.html
Tsui, Daniel C. tsui, daniel C. (1951). CN Yang and TD Lee were awarded the nobel Prizefor Physics in 1957 and they both went to the University of Chicago. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/T/Tsui/Tsui.htm
Extractions: Tsui, Daniel C. I tend to partition my life into three compartments: childhood years in a remote village in the province of Henan in central China, schooling years in Hong Kong, and the years since I came to attend college in the United States. The only thread connecting them is the kindness, generosity and friendship from the people around me that I have experienced all my life. My childhood memories are filled with the years of drought, flood and war which were constantly on the consciousness of the inhabitants of my over-populated village, but also with my parents' self-sacrificing love and the happy moments they created for me. Like most other villagers, my parents never had the opportunity to learn how to read and write. They suffered from their illiteracy and their suffering made them determined not to have their children follow the same path at any and whatever cost to them. In early 1951, my parents seized the first and perhaps the only opportunity to have me leave them and their village to pursue education in so far away a place that neither they nor I knew how far it truly was. I left Chicago in early spring 1968 and took a position in Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey to do research in solid state physics. I found myself a niche in semiconductor research, though I never got into the main stream either in semiconductor physics, which was mostly optics and high energy band-structures, or its use in device applications. I wandered into a new frontier, which was dubbed the physics of two-dimensional electrons. In February 1982, shortly after the discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect, I moved to Princeton and started teaching.
Augustana Online Dr. daniel C. tsui, a professor 1961 graduate of Augustana College, is one of threescientists working at US universities who will share the nobel Prize for http://www.augustana.edu/articles/Nobel.htm
Extractions: NOBEL PRIZE FOR PHYSICS Dr. Daniel C. Tsui, a professor at Princeton University and a 1961 graduate of Augustana College, is one of three scientists working at U.S. universities who will share the Nobel Prize for Physics, according to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Tsui (pronounced "TSOO-ee"), who was born in Henan, China (near Hong Kong) in 1939 and came to Augustana in 1958, graduated with a degree in mathematics and membership in Augustana's Phi Beta Kappa chapter. Augustana's president, Dr. Thomas Tredway says the college is very proud of Dr Tsui's achievements and the recognition he has received for them. "His intellect and discipline represent the very best of what we hope for in the students who pursue study in the sciences at Augustana," Tredway says. Tsui will share the Nobel Prize, and the $978,000 cash award that goes with it, with Robert Laughlin of Stanford University and Horst Stoermer of Columbia University. The Swedish Academy is recognizing their discoveries of how sub-atomic particles can behave like a fluid. Their work shows that electrons acting together in strong magnetic fields can form new types of particles. The academy's citation notes that their work "led to yet another breakthrough in our understanding of quantum physics and to the development of new theoretical concepts of significance in many branches of modern physics." In April, the trio won the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics for their work.
Autobiography Of Daniel C. Tsui daniel C. tsui. CN Yang and TD Lee were awarded the nobel Prize for Physicsin 1957 and they both went to the University of Chicago. http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1998/tsui-autobio.html
Extractions: http://www.nobel.se I tend to partition my life into three compartments: childhood years in a remote village in the province of Henan in central China, schooling years in Hong Kong, and the years since I came to attend college in the United States. The only thread connecting them is the kindness, generosity and friendship from the people around me that I have experienced all my life. My childhood memories are filled with the years of drought, flood and war which were constantly on the consciousness of the inhabitants of my over-populated village, but also with my parents' self-sacrificing love and the happy moments they created for me. Like most other villagers, my parents never had the opportunity to learn how to read and write. They suffered from their illiteracy and their suffering made them determined not to have their children follow the same path at any and whatever cost to them. In early 1951, my parents seized the first and perhaps the only opportunity to have me leave them and their village to pursue education in so far away a place that neither they nor I knew how far it truly was. Peking University could leave indelible marks on us. It was they, I think, who in their unconscious ways dared us students, living in a most commercialized city, to look beyond the dollar sign and see the exploration of new frontiers in human knowledge as an intellectually rewarding and challenging pursuit.
Physics 1998 nobel Prize in Physics 19012000 http//www.nobel.se, The nobel Prize in Physics1998. Robert B. Laughlin, Horst L. Störmer, daniel C. tsui. USA, Germany, USA. http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1998/
Nobel 98 - 2 - NOVEMBRE 1998 Translate this page Un Allemand, Horst Stoermer et deux Américains, Robert B. Laughlin et daniel C.tsui, ont été récompensés par le prix nobel de Physique 1998 pour leur http://www.cite-sciences.fr/actu/numeros/N64_nov98/kiosques/html/nobel2.html
Extractions: Le physicien américain Edwin Hall aurait de quoi être fier de l'attribution du prix Nobel de physique 1998 à trois de ses fils spirituels, lui qui n'a pas pu recevoir le fameux prix pour la découverte de l'effet qui porte son nom, qui est déjà à la base d'un précédent Nobel. C'est en effet pour la découverte et l'explication, en 1982-83, d'une troisième version, connu sous le nom de l'"effet Hall quantique fractionnaire", que Daniel Tsui, Horst Stoermer et Robert B. Laughlin ont été primés par les jurés de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de Suède, ce mardi 13 octobre 1998. Et cela une dizaine d'années après le physicien allemand Klaus von Klitzing, découvreur de l'"effet Hall quantique entier".
Extractions: History Awards ... high-resolution The discovery of the quantum Hall effect is significant because researchers usually need to break up particles to make smaller ones. "In this case," said Störmer, "the amazing thing is that, by electrons cooperating with one another and not disintegrating, you get something smaller than the initial object." The Nobel committee cited the trio's work for leading to "the development of new theoretical concepts of significance in many branches of modern physics." Störmer, Laughlin and Tsui will share the $978,000 prize. "I'm just numb," said Störmer, speaking of the Royal Swedish Academy's decision to award him the most coveted honor in science. His telephone started ringing at about 6:00 a.m. on the day the physics Nobel was announced, waking him and his wife. "We finally had to take it off the hook," he said. See Also This material was adapted from a press release written by Bell Labs Media Relations. For media inquiries, please contact
Bell Labs: 'This Is One For Bell Labs' 1998) Adjunct Physics Director Horst Stormer and two former Bell Labs scientists,Robert C. Laughlin and daniel C. tsui, received the 1998 nobel Prize in http://www.bell-labs.com/news/1998/october/20/1.html
Extractions: 'This is One for Bell Labs' Stormer, Laughlin and Tsui Share Nobel Prize in Physics Murray Hill, N.J. (Oct. 20, 1998) Adjunct Physics Director Horst Stormer and two former Bell Labs scientists, Robert C. Laughlin and Daniel C. Tsui, received the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics for their work in quantum physics done at Bell Labs in the early 1980s. The award brings to 11 the number of Nobel winners who have done their work at Bell Labs. This is the third year in a row the prize has been awarded to scientists who spent a portion of their careers at Bell Labs. A few hours after winning the 1998 Nobel Prize in physics, Horst Stormer answers questions at a press conference in Murray Hill. Stormer said the prize-winning research work couldn't have been done anywhere but Bell Labs. Photo By Brigitta Hanggi "This is one for Bell Labs," said Stormer, speaking to the hundreds of colleagues who jammed the Murray Hill cafeteria to celebrate. "It's not one for me. It could not have been done anywhere but Bell Labs. I share this with all of you." Lucent Chairman and CEO Rich McGinn congratulates Stormer Stormer received a standing ovation and a champagne toast from Lucent Chairman Rich McGinn. "Just another day at Bell Labs," McGinn joked.
Fysiikan 98 - Nobelistit daniel C. tsui. 1998 nobel Laureate in Physics for discovery of anew form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations. http://solis.wwnet.fi/arkisto/Fysiikan98_nobelistit_TKKlla_kuvat/nobel98fy.htm
Extractions: Announcements physics The prize was awarded jointly to: R OBERT B. L AUGHLIN ... TORMER and D ANIEL C. T SUI for their discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations. 1998 Nobel Laureate in Physics Background Browse through the Book Stacks Featured Internet Links Prize co-recipient: Horst L. Störmer
Untitled He is the 29th winner of the nobel Prize associated with Princeton University, andthe 18th person affiliated with Princeton to daniel C. tsui biography. http://www.ocpaweb.org/newsitems/1998/tsui101598.html