The Nobel Prize in Physics 1959 was awarded jointly to Emilio Gino Segre and Owen Chamberlain for their discovery of the antiproton
The Zeuthen-Segre invariant is a numerical invariant of an algebraic surface, denoted by Z(P), where P is a smooth projective surface. It is calculated using the intersection theory of surfaces and is used to distinguish between surfaces in the same deformation class.
Many scientists worked on developing the atomic bomb. Harold C Urey devised an extraction system for the uranium. Ernest O. Lawrence devised a method of magnetic separation of the isotopes. J. Robert Oppenheimer, David Bohm, Leo Szilard, Eugene Wigner, Otto Frisch, Rudolf Peierls, Felix Bloch, Niels Bohr, Emilio Segre, James Franck, Enrico Fermi, Klaus Fuchs and Edward Teller helped put the bomb together.
It was Dmitri Mendeleev himself who predicted the existence of element number 43, but, though many claimed to have discovered or produced it, no reproduceability of any experiment proved it out. It fell to Italians Carlo Perrier and Emilio Segrèworking at the University of Palermo in Sicily in 1937 to find and isolate it. They did so with the help of materials they were given by Ernest O. Lawrence, who was producing trans-uranium elements at the Berkeley cyclotron facility.
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Emilio Gino Segre won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1959.
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1959 was awarded jointly to Emilio Gino Segre and Owen Chamberlain for their discovery of the antiproton
Technetium was discovered by Emilio Segre and Carlo Perrier in 1936 at the University of Palermo, Sicily, Italy
Dale R. Corson, K. R. Mackenzie, and Emilio Segre
Dale R. Coroson, K.R MacKenzie and Emilio Segre in 1940
The name technetium was proposed by Emilio Segre and Carlo Perrier.
Technetium was discovered by Carlo Perrier and Emilio Segre in 1936.
Dayle E Corson, Keneth Ross Mc Kensey and Emilio Segre.
Technetium was discovered by Emilio Segre and Carlo Perrier in 1936 at the University of Palermo, Sicily, Italy.
Technetium was discovered by Emilio Segre and Carlo Perrier in 1936 at the University of Palermo, Sicily, Italy.
Technetium was discovered by Emilio Segre and Carlo Perrier in 1936 at the University of Palermo, Sicily, Italy.
Technetium was discovered by Emilio Segre and Carlo Perrier in 1936 at the University of Palermo, Sicily, Italy.