[Home]History of John Bardeen

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Revision 4 . . December 18, 2001 1:45 am by (logged).163.207.xxx [*added a bit on John Bardeen and Xerox]
Revision 3 . . (edit) June 14, 2001 11:44 pm by KoyaanisQatsi
  

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Changed: 3c3,7
Recipient in 1956 of the Nobel Prize in physics for the transistor and in 1972 for the BCS theory.
Bardeen studied Physics as a grad student at Princeton, with Nobel Laureate Eugene Wigner.

In 1956, Bardeen received the Nobel Prize in physics for the transistor. Amazingly, he received it again in 1972 for the BCS theory. No other physicist has received it twice.

Bardeen was also an important advisor to the Xerox Corporation, urging Xerox executive to keep their California research center, Xerox PARC, afloat when the parent company was suspicious that its research center would amount to little. Xerox PARC went on to create the point-and-click method, the mouse, and the laser printer, among other things.

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