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Wilson, Robert Woodrow 1936-
US physicist and Nobel Prize winner
Born in Houston, Texas, he was educated at Rice University and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). He then joined Bell Laboratories in New Jersey and became head of the radiophysics research department in 1976. There he collaborated with Arno Allan Penzias in using a large radio telescope designed for communication with satellites; they detected in 1964 a radio noise background which came from all directions with an energy distribution corresponding to that of a black body at a temperature of 3.5 K. Robert Dicke and Phillip Peebles suggested that this radiation is the residual radiation from the Big Bang at the universe's creation, which has cooled to 3.5 K by the expansion of the universe. Such a cosmic background radiation had been predicted to exist by George Gamow, Ralph Alpher, Hans Bethe and Robert Herman in 1948. Wilson and Penzias (jointly with Peter Kapitza) shared the 1978 Nobel Prize for physics for their work, which can reasonably be claimed to be of the most important contributions to cosmology in the 20th century. In 1970 he continued his collaboration with Penzias and they discovered (with K B Jefferts) the 2.6mm wavelength radiation from interstellar carbon monoxide.
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The Chambers Dictionary (13th edition)
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The Chambers Thesaurus
The Chambers Thesaurus (4th Edition) is a veritable treasure-trove, including the greatest selection of alternative words and phrases available in an A to Z format. -
Chambers Biographical Dictionary
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Thoroughly revised and updated for its 9th edition.
Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.
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