• Thumbnail for Emilio Segrè
    Emilio Gino Segrè (Italian: [seˈgrɛ]; 1 February 1905 – 22 April 1989) was an Italian and naturalized-American physicist and Nobel laureate, who discovered...
    35 KB (4,014 words) - 12:38, 27 April 2024
  • The chart of the nuclides is also known as the Segrè chart, after the Italian physicist Emilio Segrè. A chart or table of nuclides maps the nuclear,...
    13 KB (1,346 words) - 21:19, 17 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Discovery of nuclear fission
    colleagues in Rome—Edoardo Amaldi, Oscar D'Agostino, Franco Rasetti and Emilio Segrè—picked up on this idea. Rasetti visited Meitner's laboratory in 1931...
    98 KB (12,318 words) - 13:21, 5 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Project Y
    latter three former students of Oppenheimer, and experimental physicists Emilio Segrè, Felix Bloch, Franco Rasetti, John Manley, and Edwin McMillan. They tentatively...
    129 KB (16,870 words) - 17:23, 4 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Italian Americans
    developed the first atom bomb. He was subsequently joined at Los Alamos by Emilio Segrè, one of his colleagues from Italy, who was also destined to receive the...
    271 KB (31,146 words) - 12:35, 26 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Via Panisperna boys
    Oscar D'Agostino, Ettore Majorana, Bruno Pontecorvo, Franco Rasetti and Emilio Segrè. All were physicists, except for D'Agostino, who was a chemist. The group...
    9 KB (1,068 words) - 01:11, 12 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Enrico Fermi
     xix–xx. Segrè 1970, p. 171. Segrè 1970, p. 172. Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 643. Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 648. Segrè 1970, p. 175. Segrè 1970, p. 179...
    98 KB (11,077 words) - 20:25, 22 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Antiproton
    particle accelerator by University of California, Berkeley, physicists Emilio Segrè and Owen Chamberlain, for which they were awarded the 1959 Nobel Prize...
    16 KB (1,636 words) - 14:04, 26 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Owen Chamberlain
    1920 – February 28, 2006) was an American physicist who shared with Emilio Segrè the Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the antiproton, a sub-atomic...
    9 KB (735 words) - 01:37, 15 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Bevatron
    discovered there in 1955, resulting in the 1959 Nobel Prize in physics for Emilio Segrè and Owen Chamberlain. It accelerated protons into a fixed target, and...
    13 KB (1,313 words) - 15:39, 27 March 2024