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Topic: Eric Cornell


  
  An Event Apart: Eric Meyer
ERIC MEYER has been working with the web since late 1993 and is an internationally recognized expert on the subjects of HTML, CSS, and Web standards.
In his personal time, Eric acts as List Chaperone of the highly active css-discuss mailing list, which he co-founded with John Allsopp of Western Civilisation and is now supported by evolt.org.
Eric lives in Cleveland, Ohio, which is a much nicer city than you’ve been led to believe, and for nine years was the host of “Your Father’s Oldsmobile,” a Big Band-era radio show heard weekly on WRUW 91.1-FM in Cleveland.
www.aneventapart.com /speakers/ericmeyer   (337 words)

  
  Eric Cornell Update | Special Report | News Center | University of Colorado at Boulder
Cornell is a research physicist and fellow at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and adjoint professor of physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Necrotizing fasciitis, caused by the bacteria that causes strep throat, is a serious illness that caused Cornell to be hospitalized at the end of October, 2004.
Nobel laureate Eric Cornell, fellow and research physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and adjoint professor of physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder, talks with graduate students (from left to right) Laura Sinclair and Russell Stutz and research associate Aaron Leanhardt in his laboratory.
www.colorado.edu /news/reports/cornell   (237 words)

  
  NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Eric Allin Cornell   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Eric A. Cornell, a senior scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and professor adjoint at the University of Colorado-Boulder, received his bachelor’s degree in physics from Stanford in 1985.
Eric Cornell shared the prize with Wolfgang Ketterle, a physics professor at MIT, and Carl E. Wieman, a physics professor at the University of Colorado-Boulder.
Eric Allin Cornell (born December 19, 1961) is a physicist who, along with Carl E. Wieman, was able to synthesize Bose-Einstein condensate in 1995.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Eric-Allin-Cornell   (975 words)

  
 Eric Cornell
Eric Allin Cornell (born December 19, 1961) is a physicist who, along with Carl E. Wieman, was able to synthesize the first Bose-Einstein condensate in 1995.
For their efforts, Cornell, Wieman, and Wolfgang Ketterle shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001.
Cornell was born in Palo Alto, California and is a distinguished alumnus of both Cambridge Rindge and Latin School (1976-1979) and San Francisco's Lowell High School (1979-1980).
www.algebra.com /algebra/about/history/Eric-Cornell.wikipedia   (222 words)

  
 Department of Commerce Home Page - Press Release - Eric A. Cornell of the National Institute of Standards and ...
Eric A. Cornell of the National Institute of Standards and Technology and Carl E. Wieman of the University of Colorado at Boulder today were awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in physics.
Cornell, 39, is a senior scientist at the U.S. Department of Commerce's NIST and an adjoint professor of physics at CU-Boulder.
Eric and Carl's contribution is a proud demonstration of what can be achieved in a collaboration such as JILA between a federal agency and a major state university.
www.commerce.gov /opa/press/Secretary_Evans/2001_Releases/Oct_09_NIST_Nobel_Physics.html   (1060 words)

  
 Cornell lecture rescheduled for April 22
Eric Cornell, a joint-recipient of the 2001 Nobel Prize in physics and senior scientist at the Boulder, Colorado-based National Institute of Standards and Technology, will spend a two day residency on Luther's campus.
Cornell likens a Bose-Einstein condensate to an ice crystal forming in cold water and said it has the same relation to ordinary matter as laser light has to light from a light bulb.
Cornell and Wieman were awarded the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics from the Franklin Institute in 2000, the Lorentz Medal from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1998, the King Faisal International Prize in Science in 1997 and the Fritz London Award for low-temperature physics in 1996.
publicinformation.luther.edu /cornelldistlecturerescheduled0403.html   (622 words)

  
 Dr. Eric Cornell, Nobel Laureate, Visits Marquette
Cornell was making his rounds during a visit to Marquette hosted by the Department of Physics, and he gave the students an experience they would never forget.
Cornell proved to be an energetic speaker whose ability to keep an audience enrapt was matched only by his excitement about his research in quantum physics.
Cornell left the door open for questions, which gave the students an opportunity to ask about everything from God and Science to the possibilities presented by fuel-efficient cars in the 21 st century.
www.marquette.edu /education/pages/resources/news/cornell_oct05.shtml   (409 words)

  
 Eric Allin Cornell - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Eric Allin Cornell (born December 19, 1961) is a physicist who, along with Carl E. Wieman, was able to synthesize Bose-Einstein condensate in 1995.
Cornell was born in Palo Alto, California and is a distinguished Lowell High School alumnus.
In October 2004, his left arm and shoulder were amputated in an attempt to stop the spread of necrotizing fasciitis; he was discharged from hospital in mid-December, having recovered from the infection and returned to work part-time in April 2005.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Eric_Cornell   (178 words)

  
 Eric Cornell
Nobel prize-winning physicist Dr. Eric Cornell will speak at ACU at a lecture open to the general public Nov. 6 at 7 p.m.
Cornell holds a bachelor's degree from Stanford and a Ph.D. from MIT.
On Nov. 7, Cornell will speak to a Modern Physics class at 9 a.m., have an informal pizza lunch with physics majors, and present a lecture to physics students at 2 p.m.
www.acu.edu /events/news/archives2003/031030_Nobel.html   (228 words)

  
 Cornell Discusses His Recovery from Necrotizing Fasciitis with Reporters
Cornell is a research physicist and fellow at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, an adjoint professor of physics at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and a fellow of JILA, which is jointly operated by NIST and CU-Boulder.
Eric: It’s interesting to be a professional scientist and to be the subject of treatment and study.
Eric: I am going to get a prosthetic arm and it is possible to get an attachment on one that you can put down on the pool table, it is a little sort groove and it basically replaces your left hand bridge.
www.nist.gov /public_affairs/newsfromnist_Cornell_mediaevent.htm   (4811 words)

  
 Stanford's Nobel connection continues: 10/01   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Eric A. Cornell, a senior scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and professor adjoint at the University of Colorado-Boulder, received his bachelor’s degree in physics from Stanford in 1985.
Eric Cornell shared the prize with Wolfgang Ketterle, a physics professor at MIT, and Carl E. Wieman, a physics professor at the University of Colorado-Boulder.
Cornell, Ketterle and Wieman first captured and laser cooled atoms in a combined magnetic and optical trap, further laser cooled them in optical molasses, and then captured the atoms in a purely magnetic trap.
news-service.stanford.edu /news/2001/october10/physics-a.html   (325 words)

  
 cbs4denver.com - Professor Talks About His 'Lucky Break'
Cornell, who shared the 2001 Nobel in physics, was diagnosed six months ago with necrotizing fasciitis, a bacterial infection that kills skin, muscle and fat tissue.
Cornell said losing his arm was more "inconvenience than catastrophe." He said he recently passed a milestone: tying his shoes by himself.
Cornell won the 2001 Nobel Prize in physics with CU professor Carl Wieman and Massachusetts Institute of Technology physicist Wolfgang Ketterle.
cbs4denver.com /topstories/local_story_102185902.html   (490 words)

  
 Science EduNet | New York Academy of Sciences
The Nobel Prize in Physics in the year 2001 was awarded to Eric A. Cornell for the first achievement of Bose-Einstein Condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms and for studies of the properties of the Bose Einstein Condensate.
The co-recipients of the prize were Carl E. Wieman, who led the JILA group with Cornell, and Wolfgang Ketterle who was associated with Cornell and Wieman's research group and carried out a similar experiment that added to the knowledge of the properties of Bose-Einstein Condensates.
Cornell and Wieman's research group at JILA is still at the forefront of Bose-Einstein Condensate research.
www.nyas.org /sciedunet/articles/edfeature.asp?articleID=53   (2337 words)

  
 Nobel Prize winner speaks about research - The Stanford Daily Online
Cornell said he was eager to return to his Colorado lab after the excitement of his trip to Stockholm and the attention brought by the December announcement of the award.
Cornell suggested that the condensate state allows for precise measurements in gases, which could be effective in the production of an atomic clock.
Cornell’s lecture was part of an annual lecture series sponsored by the Stanford Physics Department in honor of Robert Hofstadter, a longtime Stanford Physics Professor and winner of the 1961 Nobel Prize in that field.
daily.stanford.org /article/2002/2/15/nobelPrizeWinnerSpeaksAboutResearch   (633 words)

  
 Happy Days for 'Lucky' Cu Prof; Laureate Who Lost Shoulder, Arm Talks of Near-Death, Life - Science - RedOrbit
Cornell said the loss of his arm and shoulder is an inconvenience, not a catastrophe.
Cornell was kept in a medically induced coma for three weeks to allow his body to recover a bit.
Cornell is a research physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, an adjoint professor of physics at the University of Colorado, and a fellow at JILA, a joint CU-NIST research institute.
www.redorbit.com /news/display?id=143539&source=r_science   (1511 words)

  
 Bose-Einstein useful in new study: Eric Cornell, a fellow of JILA, uses 'superatoms' as tool of science : ...
Eric Cornell, center, and graduate students John Obrecht, left, and Robert Wild have published a paper on their use of Bose-Einstein condensate to detect how Casimir-Polder force changes with temperature changes in a glass sheet.
Cornell said the work could be helpful to physicists working to develop a grand theory that unifies Einstein's general relativity and quantum mechanics.
Eric Cornell, a fellow of both the National Institute of Standards and Technology and JILA, a joint University of Colorado-NIST institute, shared the 2001 Nobel Prize for his 1995 co-discovery of Bose-Einstein condensate, a new form of matter.
dailycamera.com /news/2007/feb/08/bose-einstein-useful-in-new-study   (622 words)

  
 Nobel laureate Eric A. Cornell to give Hofstadter lecture: 02/02
Cornell is a senior scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and professor at the University of Colorado-Boulder.
A Stanford alumnus, Cornell says he is pleased to give this lecture in memory of one of Stanford's distinguished physics professors.
For Cornell, who received his bachelor's degree in physics in 1985, the excellent undergraduate education at Stanford -- both in the classroom and in the laboratory -- launched him into a career in research.
news-service.stanford.edu /news/february6/cornelladvance-26.html   (532 words)

  
 Nobel laureate triumphs over loss of arm and returns to lab : Nature
Cornell will be fitted for a prosthetic arm, and hopes to have an attachment that will allow him to play pool.
Cornell has already returned part-time to his lab at JILA, the institute run jointly by the University of Colorado and the National Institute of Standards and Technology where he and his colleague Carl Weiman created a new form of matter called a Bose−Einstein condensate.
Cornell is now embarking on several studies involving Bose−Einstein condensates, as well as searching for an elusive property of the electron known as its permanent dipole moment.
www.nature.com /nature/journal/v434/n7036/full/434945a.html   (619 words)

  
 [No title]
Working with Cornell and Wieman on the initial BEC were postdoctoral researcher Michael Anderson and CU-Boulder graduate students Jason Ensher and Michael Matthews.
In 2001, Wieman and Cornell were part of a CU-Boulder and JILA team that was able to make a Bose-Einstein condensate shrink -- an event which was followed by a tiny explosion.
Cornell, a senior scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, received the Nobel Prize in physics in 2001 with Colorado University Professor Carl Wieman for leading a team in the creation of the world's first Bose-Einstein condensate in 1995.
www.lycos.com /info/bose-einstein-condensate--eric-cornell.html   (241 words)

  
 Absolute Zero and the Conquest of Cold
Eric Cornell was born in Palo Alto, California in 1961.
Cornell and Wieman were able to synthesize the first Bose-Einstein condensate in 1995.
Cornell was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001, together with Wieman and Wolfgang Ketterle "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates".
www.absolutezerocampaign.org /get_involved/short_bios/cornell.htm   (211 words)

  
 Stanford University Department of Physics - Hofstadter Lecture
This year's distinguished invited speaker is Professor Eric A. Cornell, a co-recipient of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Cornell is a Fellow of JILA and the National Institute of Standards and Technology at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
Eric Cornell will discuss how one reaches the necessary record-low temperatures, and explain why one goes to all of the trouble of making this bizarre state of matter.
www.stanford.edu /dept/physics/events/hofstadter2002.html   (367 words)

  
 Eric A. Cornell
Der Artikel Eric A. Cornell gehört zur Kategorie: Mann, US-Amerikaner, Nobelpreisträger für Physik, Physiker (20.
Bemerkenswerterweise kam nach Cornells Weggang vom MIT Wolfgang Ketterle in die Arbeitsgruppe Pritchards, der später mit ihm den Nobelpreis erhalten sollte.
Eric Cornell heiratete im Januar 1995 Celeste Landry, die er bereits 10 Jahre früher in Stanford kennengelernt, aber wieder aus den Augen verloren hatte.
www.wiederaufarbeitungsanlage.de /Eric_A._Cornell.html   (332 words)

  
 Cornell in the News
ILR Professor Ronald Ehrenberg, director of the Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, is quoted in an article about new findings by the American Association of University Professors that show a decline in the number of faculty with tenure or on a tenure track at American colleges and universities.
Francis J. DiSalvo, the John A. Newman Professor of Physical Science and founding director of the Cornell Center for A Sustainable Future, is quoted in an article about his visit to the Texas Aand M University Qatar at which he delivered a lecture on the formation of partnerships for sustainable development.
Cornell's entry into the 3rd annual DARPA Urban Challenge was one of the 6 out of 11 finalists (out of 89 original applicants) that successfully completed the test of driverless cars on urban streets at the former George Air Force Base in Southern California's Mojave Desert last weekend.
pressoffice.cornell.edu /CUN   (2495 words)

  
 SUNY Geneseo
GENESEO, N.Y. — Dr. Eric Cornell, a winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics, will speak at the State University of New York at Geneseo on March 18 and 19 as part of the American Physical Society’s Division of Laser Sciences Distinguished Traveling Lecture Program and the SUNY Geneseo Robert Sells Lecture Series.
Cornell and two other physicists received the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics "for the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates," according to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which issued a news release about the prize at the time.
Eric Cornell is a senior scientist at the National Institute for Standards and Technology and a professor in the Department of Physics at University of Colorado at Boulder.
www.geneseo.edu /news/nrap.php?pg=CornellLectureCurrent.html   (680 words)

  
 Eric Alterman - Home
Eric Alterman is a Distinguished Professor of English, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, and Professor of Journalism at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.
Thanks to the machinations of the right, there is no dirtier word in American politics today than “liberal”—yet public opinion polls consistently show that the majority of Americans hold liberal views on everything from health care to foreign policy.
In this feisty, accessible primer, bestselling author Eric Alterman sets out to restore liberalism to its rightful honored place in our political life as the politics of America’s everyday citizens.
ericalterman.com   (565 words)

  
 Eric Mack On-Line
“Eric helps move me from hope to trust about how we're utilizing technology, as we attempt to stay on the leading edge of modeling world-class personal and organizational productivity.
Eric Mack on re: Conference preparation going well
Eric Mack on I think we will try this experiment again another day...
www.ericmackonline.com   (1920 words)

  
 Welcome to alumni.cornell | Alumni Parents and Friends of Cornell University
Join the Cornell Clubs of Greater Philadelphia and Delaware for a Yuletide Buffet Dinner and a tour of the holiday displays at Longwood Gardens, Route 1, Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, 3-8 p.m.
Learn how your support for students, faculty, and facilities can shape Cornell's future and change the world.
Cornell is now issuing NetID's to all alumni.
www.alumni.cornell.edu   (237 words)

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