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  1. 15. Juni 2013 · Kenneth Geddes Wilson war ein US-amerikanischer Physiker und Träger des Nobelpreises für Physik 1982 „für seine Theorie über kritische Phänomene bei Phasenumwandlungen“. Er wurde am 8. Juni 1936 in Waltham, Massachusetts in den Vereinigten Staaten geboren und starb am 15. Juni 2013 mit 77 Jahren in Saco, Maine. In diesem Jahr hätte er ...

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  2. Nobel Laureate Kenneth G. Wilson, who joined Ohio State University’s Department of Physics as the Hazel C. Youngberg Trustees Distinguished Professor in 1988, died June 15, 2013 at his home in Maine. He was 77 years old. Wilson came to Ohio State from Cornell University, where he had been a member of their physics department since 1963.

  3. Adam Kenneth Wilson ist ein amerikanischer Schauspieler. Entdecke seine Biographie, Details seiner 7 Karriere-Jahre und alle News.

  4. Kenneth Wilson solved the problem in 1971 through a type of renormalization, which can be described as solving the problem piece by piece. To cite this section MLA style: Kenneth G. Wilson – Facts.

  5. Since 1988, Dr. Wilson has been a faculty member at The Ohio State University. His current research interests include physics education research. Some of his PhD students include Roman Jackiw, Steve Shenker, and Michael Peskin . Wilson's father was the prominent chemist E. Bright Wilson, and his brother David is also a Professor at Cornell in ...

  6. ISBN: 978-981-4619-22-6 (softcover) USD 44.00. Description. Chapters. Reviews. "Kenneth Wilson was a brilliant and creative contributor to the work on renormalization groups and phase transitions. He applied his multifaceted genius to condensed matter physics as well as nuclear and elementary particle physics." by Murray Gell-Mann. The purpose ...

  7. Kenneth Wilson superbly documents everyday American life in the early 20th century through images on real photo postcards--and messages inscribed on them. His comments on individual cards are enhanced by detailed historical research into the ordinary people who made, sent, and received them.” —Jeffrey L. Meikle, author, Design in the USA , and Postcard America