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Topic: Samuel C C Ting


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
  Samuel C. C. Ting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Chao Chung Ting (丁肇中 pinyin: Dīng Zhàozhōng; Wade-Giles: Ting¹ Chao⁴-chung¹) (born January 27, 1936) is a Michigan-born Chinese American physicist who received the Nobel Prize in 1976 for the discovery of the subatomic ψ particle with Burton Richter.
Ting's ancestry is Rizhao (日照縣), Shandong, on mainland China.
As a result, Samuel Ting's formal childhood education had been discontinuous and sporadic, and was mostly home-schooled by his parents, who later on became professors of science and psychology, respectively, of the National Taiwan University in Taipei, Taiwan.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_C._C._Ting   (371 words)

  
 Michigan Greats - Samuel C. C. Ting
One of Ting's graduate school classmates at the UM was Homer Neal, UM President Emeritus and now a physicist active in the ATLAS experiment, a major research project situated at the CERN laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland.
In the end, Ting concluded that the experiment provided evidence for a new elementary particle that was three times heavier than a proton and much longer-lived than any resonant state of elementary particles known up to that time (where "long life" is often measured in minute fractions of a second).
Ting at CERN Symposium in honor of the UM's Lawrence Jones, December, 1998.
www.research.umich.edu /news/michigangreats/ting.html   (1635 words)

  
 13th Annual Leon Pape Memorial Lecture   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Ting is a high-energy nuclear physicist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his co-discovery of a fundamental atomic particle.
Ting was born in 1936 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where his parents were graduate students at the University of Michigan.
Ting's research activities are global and will soon become interplanetary -- in addition to his work at the MIT Laboratory for Nuclear Science and the CERN Laboratory in Switzerland, he is preparing an experiment for the International Space Station.
www.calstatela.edu /univ/ppa/newsrel/sccting.htm   (419 words)

  
 C | TutorGig.co.uk Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Dataparallel C C with parallel extensions by Hatcher and Quinn of the University of New Hampshire.
C command is a relationship in grammatical parse tree s which is similar to the idea of siblings and all their descendents in family trees.
C peptide is a peptide which is made when proinsulin is split into insulin and C peptide.
www.tutorgig.co.uk /encyclopedia/sencyclo.jsp?index=1&keywords=C++   (446 words)

  
 Ting, Samuel Chao Chung - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Ting, Samuel Chao Chung
It was found to be identical to the ψ particle discovered in the same year by Burton Richter and his team at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, California.
Ting and Richter shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1976 for their discovery of the ψ meson.
In 1996 Ting was at CERN and the Massachusetts Institute for Technology, working on the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a spacebased antiparticle detector.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Ting,%20Samuel%20Chao%20Chung   (167 words)

  
 BookRags: Samuel Chao Chung Ting Biography
Samuel Chao Chung Ting's study of the physics of electron-positron pairs produced during a nuclear reaction led to the discovery of a new particle.
Ting's work during the latter decades of the twentieth century found him involved in what was dubbed "Big Science," experimentation requiring financing by top-notch teams of scientists, expensive state-of-the art equipment, governing boards, and an international approach.
Ting had discovered a new elementary particle three times heavier than a proton, with a narrow range of energy states, and with a longer life span than anything known in physics.
www.bookrags.com /biography/samuel-chao-chung-ting   (1894 words)

  
 Samuel c c ting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Start the Samuel c c ting article or add a request for it.
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www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/samuel_c__c__ting   (194 words)

  
 Geometry.Net - Nobel: Ting Samuel C C
The son of a Chinese college professor who was studying in the United States when Ting was born, he was raised in mainland China and Taiwan and at the age of 20 emigrated to the United States.
Ting taught briefly at Columbia University and was group leader at a nuclear facility at Hamburg, W.Ger., before joining the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, in 1967, becoming a professor in 1969.
Ting has helped the Department of Physics with faculty recruitment, and two of his former graduate students, Jianming Qian and Bing Zhou, are members of the faculty.
www.geometry.net /detail/nobel/ting_samuel_c_c.html   (2652 words)

  
 Michigan Great Samuel C. C. Ting: Nobel Laureate physicist has long, strong ties with U
Ting‘s parents, scholars in their own right, were both graduate students at the University in early 1936.
Jones says Ting was very talented academically, and that he was “a young man in a hurry, “ who even chose his dissertation research project with an eye toward how long he would need to complete the work.
One of Ting‘s graduate school classmates was physicist Homer Neal, former vice president for research and former interim president of the University.
www.umich.edu /~urecord/9899/May24_99/17.htm   (762 words)

  
 Early Court Records in Rural Sweden
Entry #14 Oct 1700(Hösta ting) is a dispute between Per Hemmingsson of Giöseboo (Högsby socken) and Erick of Fargshult (Mörlunda socken).
I was never able to find a name for her in the conventional records, but in July 1713(summer ting) she makes one of a series of court appearances for adultery (lägersmål).
Vinter ting 1706 #25 talks about the farm of Hammarsbo (Måillla socken)...Hans Persson i ibm.(Hammarsbo) i sin skykon broder David Persson sampt systers Elisabeth, Sigrid, och Maria Jonsdotter (Maria is a half-sister although it doesn't say that).
www.progenealogists.com /swedishcourt.htm   (4619 words)

  
 Professor Samuel C.C. Ting
Professor Samuel C.C. Ting was born in 1936 in Michigan, USA.
In 1974, Professor Ting discovered in very precise experiments a new particle that he called the J-particle, the first of a new class of heavy, long-lived mesons.
Professor Ting is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the US National Academy of Sciences.
www.cuhk.edu.hk /ipro/pressrelease/060503Ting_e.htm   (241 words)

  
 Discovery of the J/psi Particle
The 1976 Nobel Prize in physics was shared by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher who used Brookhaven's Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) to discover a new particle and confirm the existence of the charmed quark.
Samuel C.C. Ting (right) was credited for finding what he called the "J" particle, the same particle as the "psi" found at nearly the same time at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center by a group led by Burton Richter.
Ting's experiment took advantage of the AGS's high-intensity proton beams, which bombarded a stationary target to produce showers of particles that could be detected by complex detectors.
www.bnl.gov /bnlweb/history/nobel/nobel_76.asp   (282 words)

  
 Samuel C. C. Ting   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Samuel Chao Chung Ting (丁肇中 pinyin : Dīng Zhàozhōng; Wade-Giles : Ting¹ Chao⁴-chung¹) (born January 27 1936) is a Michigan -born Chinese American physicist who received the Nobel Prize in 1976 for the discovery of the subatomic J particle with Burton Richter.
His parents met as students in and moved back to the warring China when he was an infant.
As result Samuel Ting's formal childhood education had discontinuous and sporadic and was mostly home-schooled by his parents: Kuan-hai Ting (丁觀海) Tsun-ying Jeanne Wang (王雋英) who were China- US-educated professors -- of science and psychology respectively -- of the National Taiwan University.
www.freeglossary.com /Samuel_C._C._Ting   (330 words)

  
 Encyclopedia
The principle of space reflection symmetry, or parity (P) conservation, states that the laws of nature are invariant when the three spatial coordinates, x, y, and z, of all particles are reflected (that is, when their signs are changed).
If particles A and B with momenta –pA and –pB produce particles C and D with momenta –pC and –pD at the same rate as R, then the reaction is invariable under parity (P).
The first traces of quarks were provided by the American physicists Jerome I. Friedman and Henry W. Kendall and the Canadian physicist Richard E. Taylor in a series of experiments conducted between 1967 and 1973 at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC).
www.historychannel.com /encyclopedia/article.jsp?link=FWNE.fw..el028900.a   (2341 words)

  
 The 12 Most Brilliant Asian Americans of All Time 1/2 | Asian American Personalities | GOLDSEA
C N Yang's longtime focus on statistical mechanics and symmetry principles came together to suggest the violation of parity conservation in weak reactions, the work that won him, together with T D Lee, the 1957 Physics Nobel Prize.
Samuel C C Ting became the first U.S.-born Asian ever to win a Nobel Prize by virtue of having been born prematurely on January 27, 1936 while his Chinese parents were visiting Ann Arbor, Michigan.
While pursuing experimental work in Germany, Ting became a leader in the technique of detecting elementary particles by studying electron-positron pairs produced by firing protons at high speeds.
www.goldsea.com /Personalities/Brilliant/brilliant.html   (969 words)

  
 Hsin Ting - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Ting, Samuel Chao Chung, born in 1936, American physicist and Nobel Prize winner.
In 1976 Ting shared the Nobel Prize in physics with fellow...
Ting ware was decorated with the previously mentioned motifs and covered...
encarta.msn.com /encnet/refpages/search.aspx?q=Hsin+Ting   (90 words)

  
 Becoming American: The Chinese Experience . Samuel C.C. Ting Bio | PBS
Samuel C.C. Ting was born on 27 January 1936 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA., where his parents, Professor K.H. Ting and Professor T.Y. (Jeanne) Wang Ting, were students at the University of Michigan.
Ting received his elementary and secondary education in China, during the 1936-1956 period.
In 1956, Ting returned to the United States to attend the University of Michigan as an engineering student, but he soon transferred his major to physics.
www.pbs.org /becomingamerican/ap_pjourneys_bio2.html   (584 words)

  
 Samuel C. C. Ting   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Samuel Chao Chung Ting (丁肇中 pinyin : DīngZhàozhōng; Wade-Giles : Ting¹ Chao⁴-chung¹) (born January 27, 1936) is a Michigan -born Chinese American physicist who received the NobelPrize in 1976 for the discovery of the subatomic Jparticle with Burton Richter.
Hisparents met as students in Michigan and moved back to the warring China when he was aninfant.
As a result, Samuel Ting's formal childhood education had been discontinuous and sporadic, and was mostly home-schooled by his parents: Kuan-hai Ting (丁觀海) and Tsun-yingJeanne Wang (王雋英), who were China- and US-educated professors -- of science and psychology, respectively -- of the National Taiwan University.
www.therfcc.org /samuel-c.-c.-ting-61585.html   (288 words)

  
 Ting to direct space-station experiment - MIT News Office
Nobel laureate Professor Samuel C. Ting has been chosen to direct a major scientific experiment that will fly on the space shuttle and later on the International Space Station.
NASA and the Department of Energy (DOE) signed an agreement September 20 to conduct the experiment and have the research team led by Dr. Ting, whose research is supported by MIT's Laboratory for Nuclear Science.
Ting, professor of physics and Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor, shared the Nobel Prize in physics in 1976 with MIT alumnus Burton Richter of Stanford for discovering the J/Psi particle, a heavy elementary particle.
web.mit.edu /newsoffice/1995/ting-0927.html   (750 words)

  
 Samuel C C Ting
Samuel Chao Chung Ting (丁肇中 pinyin : Dīng Zhàozhōng; Wade-Giles : Ting¹ Chao⁴-chung¹) (born January 27, 1936) is a Michigan -born Chinese American physicist who received the Nobel Prize...
I was born on 27 January 1936 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the first of three children of Kuan Hai Ting, a professor of engineering, and Tsun-Ying Wang, a professor of psychology.
Samuel C.C. Ting's speech at the Nobel Banquet, December 10, 1976 (Translation) Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies and Gentlemen, Professor Burton Richter and I wish to thank the Nobel...
www.logicjungle.com /wiki/Samuel_C._C._Ting   (289 words)

  
 BookRags: Samuel Chao Chung Ting Biography
Ting was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on January 27, 1936, the son of a Chinese student studying at the University of Michigan.
The charm quark is one of six types of quark which, along with leptons, are believed to be the fundamental particles of which all matter is made.
Ting remains the Thomas Dudley Cabot Institute Professor at MIT.
www.bookrags.com /biography/samuel-chao-chung-ting-wsd   (447 words)

  
 C in TutorGig Encyclopedia
C, read as C minus minus, is a name for several independently developed programming language s.
C is an object oriented programming object oriented, data parallel superset of ANSI C with synchronous semantics, for the Connection Machine, designed by Thinking Machines, 1987.
C grew out of C and is mostly a superset of the latter.
www.tutorgig.com /es/C%2B%2B   (821 words)

  
 Ting, Samuel Chad Chung   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Ting učil na Columbijské universitě a stal se vedoucím skupiny "Atomic Facility" v Hamburgu.
V roce 1974 objevil Ting novou částici J/psí.
Je složena z kvarku c a jeho antikvarku a tímto objevem byla podpořen kvarkový model částic.
www.aldebaran.cz /famous/people/Ting_Samuel.html   (153 words)

  
 Samuel Chao Chung Ting - Wikipedia
Ting erhielt 1976 zusammen mit Burton Richter den Physik-Nobelpreis für wesentliche Beiträge zur Entdeckung des J/Psi-Mesons.
Die Gruppe um Ting entdeckte das Teilchen 1974 am Brookhaven National Laboratory, im selben Jahr wurde das Teilchen von der Gruppe um Richter am Stanford Linear Accelerator Center entdeckt.
Informationen der Nobelstiftung zur Preisverleihung 1976 für Samuel Chao Chung Ting (englisch)
de.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_Chao_Chung_Ting   (104 words)

  
 Leung: Chinese Americans Project   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In 1957, two scientists who had worked as guest scientists at BNL during the summer of 1956 received the Nobel Prize in physics for radically questioning one of physics' basic tenets.
Lee, of Columbia University, and C. Yang, then of Brookhaven, interpreted results of particle decay experiments at BNL's Cosmotron particle accelerator and discovered that the fundamental and supposedly absolute law of parity conservation had been violated.
SAMUEL C.C. The 1976 Nobel Prize in physics was shared by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher who used BNL's Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) to discover a new particle and confirm the existence of the charmed quark.
www.sfusd.k12.ca.us /schwww/sch405/IUP/education.html   (2186 words)

  
 Ten Nobels for the future
Samuel C.C. Ting was born in 1936 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where his parents were attending university.
Ting's research has centred on experimental particle physics, quantum electrodynamics and the interaction of photons with matter.
In 1976, he received the Nobel Prize for Physics (with Burton Richter) for the discovery of the heavy particle produced by the electron-positron collision, which led to the completion of the quark model.
www.hypothesis.it /nobel/eng/bio/ting.htm   (276 words)

  
 Study at U of M   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
From a conversation between Bill Moyers and the physicist Sam Ting, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize for Physics.
SAM TING: They were students at the University of Michigan.
SAM TING: He's at CERN [European Laboratory for Particle Physics] He was at my home for dinner recently.
www.umich.edu /~bhl/bhl/exhibits/UMChina/China/life/SamuelTing.htm   (827 words)

  
 Inside ER - March/April   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Nobel Prize winning scientist Dr. Samuel C.C. Ting, the first recipient of the Thomas Dudley Cabot Professorship of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is the principal investigator for the U.S. contribution to the AMS research.
Ting shared the 1976 Nobel Prize for Physics with MIT alumnus Burton Richter for discovering what came to be called the J particle, a heavy elementary particle of subatomic matter.
Ting's research has long been supported in part by the Office of Energy Research.
www.pnl.gov /er_news/04_98/inside.htm   (591 words)

  
 Samuel C. C. Ting : Samuel Chao Chung Ting
Samuel C. Ting : Samuel Chao Chung Ting
Samuel Chao Chung Ting (born 1936) (丁肇中 pinyin: Dīng Zhàozhōng) was a Michigan-born Chinese American physicist who received the Nobel Prize in 1976 for the discovery of the subatomic J particle[?] with Burton Richter[?].
He received his Master of Science degree in 1960, and two years later, the Doctoral degree.
www.fastload.org /sa/Samuel_Chao_Chung_Ting.html   (302 words)

  
 UGA chemist Henry F. Schaefer III named honorary professor by Chinese university   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The previous honorary professor at Xinjiang University in the sciences was Samuel C.C. Ting in June 2002.
Ting is professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the recipient of the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Schaefer received his bachelor’s degree in chemical physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and doctoral degree in chemical physics from Stanford University.
www.uga.edu /news-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi?archive=7&num=2048&printer=1   (166 words)

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