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  1. 1. Aug. 2005 · Dr. Arthur Holly Compton. American physicist Arthur Holly Compton was one of the pioneers of high-energy physics. In 1927 he received the Nobel prize in physics for his definitive study of the scattering of high-energy photons by electrons which became known as the Compton Effect. This work was recognized as an experimental proof that ...

  2. Arthur Holly Compton earned international recognition for his research in X-rays, sharing the 1927 Nobel Prize for physics with British scientist Charles T. R. Wilson. Compton contributed the “Compton Effect,” an explanation of interactions between high-frequency photons and charged particles that became a cornerstone of quantum physics, to the scientific vocabulary. In 1941 he chaired the ...

  3. Arthur Holly Compton (Wooster, 10 settembre 1892 – Berkeley, 15 marzo 1962) è stato un fisico statunitense. Ha vinto il Premio Nobel per la fisica nel 1927 per la scoperta dell' effetto che porta il suo nome.

  4. University of Chicago. 1100 East 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. Samuel Glasstone letters from Arthur Holly Compton, Enrico Fermi, and Christian Møller concerning the origin of the terms nucleon, photon and quantum, 1948-1949. Niels Bohr Library & Archives.

  5. ARTHUR HOLLY COMPTON September 10,1892-March 15,1962 BY SAMUEL K. ALLISON k RTHUR HOLLY COMPTON was born in Wooster, Ohio, Septem-±\. ber 10, 1892, to a family destined to become known for its distinguished educators. His father was an ordained Presbyterian minister and Professor of Philosophy at the College of Wooster;

  6. Arthur Holly Compton ( Wooster, 10 september 1892 – Berkeley, 15 maart 1962) was een Amerikaans natuurkundige en winnaar van de Nobelprijs voor Natuurkunde in 1927 voor zijn ontdekking van het naar hem genoemde Compton-effect. Compton moest de prijs delen met Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, de uitvinder van het nevelvat.

  7. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1927 was divided equally between Arthur Holly Compton "for his discovery of the effect named after him" and Charles Thomson Rees Wilson "for his method of making the paths of electrically charged particles visible by condensation of vapour"