Jay Orear Fundamental Physics [UPD]
Jay Orear Fundamental Physics > https://bytlly.com/2tdZsS
Alan Guth was born in New York City and received his Ph.D. in Physics from MIT in 1973. He received the Isaac Newton Prize in 1976 for his work on the inflationary universe theory. He is the James Penrose Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University.
Mark Fischetti is an Associate Professor of Physics at Duke University. He is known for his Berkeley Lab inventions, particularly the precise and reproducible manipulation of nanoscale particles, and for the development of a new liquid-based atomic force microscope.
Homer Snyder was a theoretical physicist specializing in particle physics. He is the Assistant Professor and Harriet Cummings and Alexander Crary professors at the University of Maine. He received a Bachelor of Science in Physics and Astronomy in 1985, and a Ph.D. in Theoretical Physics in 1988, both from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has spent his professional career at the University of Maine since 1988.
Sarah Worley is a research associate in the Division of Theoretical Physics at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. She is an expert in the mathematics of gauge theory. The work she does includes applications and extensions of gauge theory to other areas of physics.
Bruce R. Hicks, Jr. earned a B.S. degree in Mathematics and Physics in 1951 from Yale University; and a Ph.D. in Physics in 1955 from Washington University in St. Louis. He is the Professor of Physics at the University of Maryland. He was among the first to carry out controlled nuclear reactor research from a scientific point of view.
Albert Einstein's first publication at age eighteen contributed to his doctoral thesis "On the electrodynamics of moving bodies" (Mitteilungen der Reichsuniversitaet Zurich 18, 116-133, April 1905). It was published as "On the electrodynamical foundation of the theory of gravitation" (Annalen der Physik, vol 64, 458-467, 1920). He also formulated the special theory of relativity (Annalen der Physik, vol 120, 522-525, 1911). Einstein's general theory of relativity is his most famous contribution. The theory correctly predicts the law of gravity that holds among any two points on the Earth's surface and how objects move. It can also be used to describe the universe as a whole. d2c66b5586