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Re: Quantum Physics, Measurements and Robert's Functional Dynamics Concept
- From: Ionel <***>
- Date: Fri, 28 May 2004 23:56:16 -0400
Tim:
Sorry, haste makes mistakes: I meant to say Dr. Richard P. Feynman, perhaps
one of the , if not the, most successful Quantum Electrodynamics physicist
of the latter half of the century , who received also the Sweedish prize in
the late 50's (perhaps 1958),like Heisenberg (NP in 1927?, and of course
the very recent ones in the last three years, such as : Wutrich (2D-NMR of
Small Protein Structure in solution in 2002), Leggit (UIUC, 2003)--QM of
superconductivity, Paul Luaterbur and P. Mansfield (2003) for Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (also involving QM). I can never remember these NP years,
for the 1920's to 1960's, except for either the earlier ones such as
Roentgen's and the Braggs who were in the first group, as well as Louis
Neel (1970), Sir Neville Mott,P.W. Anderson and Van Vleck for personal
reasons-- the first two of the three were at the Cavendish Lab in 1978
where I worked for a few years), but unlike Bohm or Mackay who didn't get
the prize, and wrote for the popular but not trivial readership, QED. 'Mea
culpa' about my mistake on Dick Feynman's first name in my previous
posting; I have not met him, but I wish I did; some of my distinguished
colleagues have met him, however.
Regards,
Ionel