English Dictionary

NUCLEAR PHYSICIST

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 Dictionary entry overview: What does nuclear physicist mean? 

NUCLEAR PHYSICIST (noun)
  The noun NUCLEAR PHYSICIST has 1 sense:

1. a physicist who specializes in nuclear physicsplay

  Familiarity information: NUCLEAR PHYSICIST used as a noun is very rare.


 Dictionary entry details 


NUCLEAR PHYSICIST (noun)


Sense 1

Meaning:

A physicist who specializes in nuclear physics

Classified under:

Nouns denoting people

Hypernyms ("nuclear physicist" is a kind of...):

physicist (a scientist trained in physics)

Instance hyponyms:

Erwin Schrodinger; Schrodinger (Austrian physicist who discovered the wave equation (1887-1961))

Lee; Tsung Dao Lee (United States physicist (born in China) who collaborated with Yang Chen Ning in disproving the principle of conservation of parity (born in 1926))

Marie Goeppert Mayer; Mayer (United States physicist (born in Germany) noted for her research on the structure of the atom (1906-1972))

Lise Meitner; Meitner (Swedish physicist (born in Austria) who worked in the field of radiochemistry with Otto Hahn and formulated the concept of nuclear fission with Otto Frisch (1878-1968))

Mossbauer; Rudolf Ludwig Mossbauer (German physicist (born in 1929))

Karl Alex Muller; Muller (Swiss physicist who studied superconductivity (born in 1927))

Oppenheimer; Robert Oppenheimer (United States physicist who directed the project at Los Alamos that developed the first atomic bomb (1904-1967))

Pauli; Wolfgang Pauli (United States physicist (born in Austria) who proposed the exclusion principle (thus providing a theoretical basis for the periodic table) (1900-1958))

Andrei Dimitrievich Sakharov; Andrei Sakharov; Sakharov (Soviet physicist and dissident; helped develop the first Russian hydrogen bomb; advocated nuclear disarmament and campaigned for human rights (1921-1989))

E. O. Lawrence; Ernest Orlando Lawrence; Lawrence (United States physicist who developed the cyclotron (1901-1958))

Leo Szilard; Szilard (United States physicist and molecular biologist who helped develop the first atom bomb and later opposed the use of all nuclear weapons (1898-1964))

Igor Tamm; Igor Yevgeneevich Tamm; Tamm (Russian physicist (1895-1971))

Edward Teller; Teller (United States physicist (born in Hungary) who worked on the first atom bomb and the first hydrogen bomb (1908-2003))

E. T. S. Walton; Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton; Ernest Walton; Walton (Irish physicist who (with Sir John Cockcroft in 1931) first split an atom (1903-1995))

Eugene Paul Wigner; Eugene Wigner; Wigner (United States physicist (born in Hungary) noted for his work on the structure of the atom and its nucleus (1902-1995))

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson; Wilson (Scottish physicist who invented the cloud chamber (1869-1959))

Hideki Yukawa; Yukawa (Japanese mathematical physicist who proposed that nuclear forces are mediated by massive particles called mesons which are analogous to the photon in mediating electromagnetic forces (1907-1981))

Enrico Fermi; Fermi (Italian nuclear physicist (in the United States after 1939) who worked on artificial radioactivity caused by neutron bombardment and who headed the group that in 1942 produced the first controlled nuclear reaction (1901-1954))

Bethe; Hans Albrecht Bethe; Hans Bethe (United States physicist (born in Germany) noted for research in astrophysics and nuclear physics (1906-2005))

Bohr; Niels Bohr; Niels Henrik David Bohr (Danish physicist who studied atomic structure and radiations; the Bohr theory of the atom accounted for the spectrum of hydrogen (1885-1962))

Born; Max Born (British nuclear physicist (born in Germany) honored for his contributions to quantum mechanics (1882-1970))

Bose; Satyendra N. Bose; Satyendra Nath Bose (Indian physicist who with Albert Einstein proposed statistical laws based on the indistinguishability of particles; led to the description of fundamental particles that later came to be known as bosons)

Broglie; de Broglie; Louis Victor de Broglie (French nuclear physicist who generalized the wave-particle duality by proposing that particles of matter exhibit wavelike properties (1892-1987))

Cockcroft; Sir John Cockcroft; Sir John Douglas Cockcroft (British physicist who (with Ernest Walton in 1931) first split an atom (1897-1967))

Arthur Compton; Arthur Holly Compton; Compton (United States physicist noted for research on x-rays and gamma rays and nuclear energy; his observation that X-rays behave like miniature bowling balls in their interactions with electrons provided evidence for the quantal nature of light (1892-1962))

Dirac; Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac (English theoretical physicist who applied relativity theory to quantum mechanics and predicted the existence of antimatter and the positron (1902-1984))

Anderson; Carl Anderson; Carl David Anderson (United States physicist who discovered antimatter in the form of an antielectron that is called the positron (1905-1991))

Feynman; Richard Feynman; Richard Phillips Feynman (United States physicist who contributed to the theory of the interaction of photons and electrons (1918-1988))

Frisch; Otto Frisch; Otto Robert Frisch (British physicist (born in Austria) who with Lise Meitner recognized that Otto Hahn had produced a new kind of nuclear reaction which they named nuclear fission; Frisch described the explosive potential of a chain nuclear reaction (1904-1979))

Gell-Mann; Murray Gell-Mann (United States physicist noted for his studies of subatomic particles (born in 1929))

Donald Arthur Glaser; Donald Glaser; Glaser (United States physicist who invented the bubble chamber to study subatomic particles (born in 1926))

Heisenberg; Werner Karl Heisenberg (German mathematical physicist noted for stating the uncertainty principle (1901-1976))

Gustav Hertz; Gustav Ludwig Hertz; Hertz (German physicist who with James Franck proved the existence of the stationary energy states postulated by Bohr (1887-1975))

Gerhard Herzberg; Herzberg (Canadian physicist (born in Germany) noted for contributions to understanding the structure of molecules (born in 1904))


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