scholarly journals Toward Small Consumption of Helium with Recycling Activities at the Institute for Solid State Physics, The University of Tokyo

Author(s):  
Shingo KATSUMOTO ◽  
Reiko SAGIYAMA ◽  
Hikaru TSUCHIYA ◽  
Minoru YAMASHITA
2021 ◽  
pp. 177-211
Author(s):  
Andrew Zangwill

Anderson spends a sabbatical year at the University of Cambridge. He informs graduate student Brian Josephson about spontaneous symmetry breaking in superconductors and Josephson discovers the effects that bear his name and won him a share of a Nobel Prize. Anderson works in this area and pursues analogies to superfluid helium four. He uses an analogy to his work on superconductivity to suggest a mechanism for mass generation for elementary particles. Peter Higgs generalizes Anderson’s idea and later wins a Nobel Prize for doing so. Anderson spends eight years as a half-time professor at the University of Cambridge. He leads the way to transform solid-state physics into condensed matter physics and does important work on superfluid helium three. He and Joyce buy a vacation home in Port Isaac, Cornwall.


Fröhlich, H. Born Rexingen, Germany, 1905. Studied theoretical physics at the University of Munich. After period in Soviet Union came to University of Bristol in 1935. Subsequently Professor of Theoretical Physics at Liverpool. Author of scientific papers on dielectrics, superconductivity and other problems in solid state physics. Author of Theory of dielectrics. .


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