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مشاهدة النسخة كاملة : الفائزون بجائزة نوبل في الفيزياء لهذا العام



الشريف
10-06-2009, 09:08 PM
تم الإعلان اليوم عن الفائزين بجائزة نوبل هذا العام وهم وهم رائد من رواد الألياف الضوئية وعلمان آخران استطاعا أن يحولوا الضوء إلى اشارات إلكترونية

وإليكم الخبر :





Communication pioneers win 2009 physics Nobel
Tue Oct 6, 2009 1:11pm EDT
By Niklas Pollard

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - A pioneer in fiber optics and two scientists who figured out how to turn light into electronic signals -- work that paved the way for the Internet age -- were awarded the 2009 Nobel Prize for physics on Tuesday.

Charles Kao, a Shanghai-born British-American, won half the 10 million Swedish crown ($1.4 million) prize for a discovery that led to a breakthrough in fiber optics, determining how to transmit light over long distances via optical glass fibers.

Willard Boyle, a Canadian-American, and George Smith of the United States shared the other half for inventing the first successful imaging technology using a digital sensor.

"This year's Nobel prize in physics is awarded for two scientific achievements that have helped to shape the foundations of today's networked societies," the award-winning committee said in a statement.

Their achievements have allowed vast amounts of information to be sent around the globe almost instantaneously, as trillions of signals make their way through tiny glass fibers now long enough to encircle the planet more than 25,000 times.

Boyle, raised over the phone to address a news conference at the Nobel committee in the Swedish capital, sounded dazed.

"I have not had my morning cup of coffee yet, so I am feeling a little bit not quite with it all. But I have this lovely feeling all over my body, like 'Wow, this is really quite exciting, but is it real?'" he said.

The Nobel prizes are given annually for achievements in chemistry, physics, medicine, peace, literature and economics. They were first awarded in 1901 in accordance with the 1895 will of Swedish millionaire Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite.

Robert Kirby-Harris, head of Britain's Institute of Physics, said nothing better symbolized the information age than the Internet and digital cameras.

"From kilobytes to gigabytes, and now to petabytes and exabytes, information has never been so free-flowing or ... so instantly visual," he said.

YOUTUBE AND HUBBLE

Kao, born in 1933, made a breakthrough in 1966 as he learned how light could travel long distances reliably via glass fibers. Four years later, the first "ultrapure" fiber was produced.

"These low-loss glass fibers facilitate global broadband communication such as the Internet," the committee said. "Text, music, images and video can be transferred around in the globe in a split second."

Kao said news of the award left him "absolutely speechless."

"This is very, very unexpected," he said in a statement issued by the Chinese University of Hong Kong, where he was vice-chancellor from 1987 to 1996 before retiring.

"Fiber optics has changed the world of information so much in these last 40 years. It certainly is due to the fiber optical networks that the news has traveled so fast."

A large proportion of the traffic over those networks is made up of digital images, which is where Boyle and Smith come in. In 1969, they invented the first successful imaging technology using a digital sensor, a so-called charge-coupled device.

"It revolutionized photography, as light can be captured electronically instead of on film," the committee said.

Martin Barstow, professor of astrophysics and space science at the University of Leicester in Britain, said the impact of the invention had been immense.

"From YouTube to the Hubble Space Telescope, these devices are now at the heart of our digital video and still cameras and underpin the extraordinary progress made in astronomy during the past 20-30 years," he said.

The work by Boyle and Smith, both employed by U.S. group Bell Laboratories before retiring more than 20 years ago, led to progress in areas from microsurgery to space exploration.

"When the Mars probe was on the surface of Mars and (they) used a camera like ours -- that wouldn't have been possible without our invention," Boyle said.

The invention has had other repercussions, some considered less welcome by privacy-minded people.

"We are the ones who started this profusion of little, small cameras working all over the world," Boyle added.

At Bell Labs from 1953 to 1979, Boyle led research in optical and satellite communications, digital and quantum electronics, computing and radio astronomy. Among his credits, he helped NASA choose a site for the Apollo landing on the moon.

Smith has led research aimed at creating lasers and other semiconductor devices and he now serves as an adviser to universities and Canadian government laboratories.

An avid sailor, Smith recently completed a long-term cruise around the globe, taking 17 years to achieve what one of his light signals could perform in a second.

Asked what he would do with the prize money, Smith from his home in New Jersey: "I'm 79 years old right now. And I don't think my life is going to change much. I don't even need a bigger boat."

(Additional reporting by Simon Johnson, Nicholas Vinocur and Adam Cox, Doina Chiacu and Maggie Fox in Washington, Kate Kelland in London; editing by Andrew Dobbie

الشريف
10-06-2009, 09:12 PM
وهذه تعريف بالفائزين بالجائزة :


(Reuters) - Charles Kao, Willard Boyle and George Smith, fathers of fiber optics and digital imaging, won the 2009 Nobel prize for physics.

Here are some details about the winners:

* CHARLES K. KAO:

-- Kao was born in Shanghai in November 1933 and received a BSc degree in 1957 and a PhD degree in 1965 both in electrical engineering from the University of London.

-- He joined ITT in 1957 as an engineer at Standard Telephones and Cables Ltd., an ITT subsidiary in the United Kingdom.

-- In 1960, he joined Standard Telecommunications Laboratories Ltd., UK, ITT's central research facility in Europe, and rose through the ranks from a research scientist to a research manager during his 10 years of service. It was during this period that Kao made his pioneering contributions to the field of optical fiber for communications.

-- Kao is credited for first publicly proposing the possibility of practical telecommunications using fibers. At the time, it was well known that information could be transmitted digitally, or in binary code.

-- Also, the possibility of using light as the medium for such a transmission was considered, but various schemes to "guide" the propagation of light, for example, in gas filled tubes, demonstrated unacceptable signal losses.

It was also considered that optical losses in glass could never be low enough for glass fibers to be practical as a transmission medium.

-- It was against this backdrop that Kao made a very careful study of the possibility of dielectric fibers for telecommunications in 1965.

-- The development of optical fiber technology by Kao and others was a watershed event in the global telecommunications and information technology revolution. Optical fiber is the "concrete" of the "information superhighway.

* WILLARD S. BOYLE:

-- Boyle was born in Nova Scotia, Canada in August 1924. He served in the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Canadian Navy during World War Two but did not see active service.

-- He gained a BSc (1947), MSc (1948) and PhD (1950) from McGill University.

-- Boyle then spent one year at Canada's Radiation Lab and two years teaching physics at the Royal Military College of Canada.

-- In 1953, Boyle joined Bell Labs where he invented the first continuously operating ruby laser in 1962, and was named on the first patent for a semiconductor injection laser.

-- He was made director of Space Science and Exploratory Studies at the Bell labs subsidiary Bellcomm in 1962, providing support for the Apollo space program and helped to select lunar landing sites. He returned to Bell Labs in 1964, working on the development of integrated circuits.

-- In 1969, Boyle and George E. Smithinvented the Charge-coupled device for which they have been joint recipients of the Franklin Institute's Stuart Ballantine Medal in 1973, the 1974 IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award and the 2006 Charles Stark Draper Prize.

-- Boyle was Executive Director of Research for Bell Labs from 1975 to his retirement in 1979, when he moved back to Nova Scotia.

* GEORGE E. SMITH

-- Smith was born in May 1930 in White Plains, New York. He gained a BS at the University of Pennsylvania in 1955 and his PhD from the University of Chicago in 1959. He joined Bell Labs in 1959, where he led research into novel lasers and semiconductor devices. He retired in 1986.

-- Smith and Boyle invented the charge-coupled device while working at Bell Labs in 1969.

-- Smith, working to improve video telephone technology, and Boyle, charged with creating a new semiconductor memory chip for computers, sketched out the basic CCD in an hour or so. In less than a week, they had a working prototype.

* WHAT IS A CCD?

-- The CCD is a silicon-based integrated circuit that converts light energy into an electronic charge. While not successful as a memory device, the CCD was key to dramatic advances in digital imaging technology.

-- CCDs provide video imaging devices a wide range of applications, including broadcasting, digital cameras, endoscopy, desktop videoconferencing, fax machines, and bar code readers

منيرة
10-08-2009, 05:50 PM
Mr. Sharif
Thank you

تهاني الغامدي
01-02-2011, 11:56 PM
جزاك الله خيراً