Luis Walter Alvarez

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Luis Walter Alvarez


Born
in San Francisco, California, The United States
June 13, 1911

Died
September 01, 1988

Genre


The development of the first bomb also involved American physicist Luis Walter Alvarez, who won a Nobel Prize of 1968 for his study of subatomic particles.

People awarded Luis Walter Alvarez, an experimental inventor. The American Journal of Physics commented, "Luis Alvarez was one of the most brilliant and productive experimental physicists of the twentieth century."

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Average rating: 4.38 · 39 ratings · 5 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
Alvarez: Adventures of a Ph...

4.23 avg rating — 66 ratings — published 1987 — 7 editions
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Impact Theory of Mass Extin...

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Experimental evidence that ...

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Notes on radioactivity and ...

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CAPTURE OF ORBITA ELECTRONS...

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Diary of a Trip to China (J...

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Alvarez

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“Arthur Compton became my graduate advisor. He was the ideal graduate advisor for me: he came into my research room only once during my graduate career and usually had no idea how I was spending my time.”
Luis W. Alvarez, Alvarez

“There is no democracy in physics. We can't say that some second-rate guy has as much right to opinion as Fermi.”
Luis W. Alvarez

“Robert Oppenheimer used to tell of the pioneer mysteries of building reliable Geiger counters that had low background noise. Among his friends, he said, there were two schools of thought. One school firmly held that the final step before one sealed off the Geiger tube was to peel a banana and wave the skin three times, sharply to the left.
The other school was equally confident that success would follow if one waved the banana peel twice to the left and then, once, smartly to the right. (My counters were unbelievably bad because I didn't use either of these techniques.)”
Luis W. Alvarez, Alvarez