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  1. Clinton Joseph Davisson (Bloomington, Illinois; 22 de octubre de 1881-Charlottesville, Virginia; 1 de febrero de 1958) fue un destacado físico estadounidense galardonado en 1937 con el premio Nobel de Física. Es conocido por las investigaciones que llevó a cabo en los campos de la electricidad, el magnetismo y la energía radiante.

  2. Clinton Joseph Davisson (October 22, 1881 – February 1, 1958) was an American physicist who won the 1937 Nobel Prize in Physics for his discovery of electron diffraction in the famous Davisson–Germer experiment.

  3. Clinton Joseph Davisson. (Bloomington, 1881 - Charlottesville, 1958) Físico norteamericano. Clinton Davisson cursó estudios en la universidad de Chicago y consiguió el doctorado en Princeton. Trabajó en el Carnegie Institute of Technology, donde permaneció desde 1911 a 1917.

  4. Clinton Joseph Davisson fue un destacado físico estadounidense galardonado en 1937 con el premio Nobel de Física.

  5. Clinton Joseph Davisson (born Oct. 22, 1881, Bloomington, Ill., U.S.—died Feb. 1, 1958, Charlottesville, Va.) was an American experimental physicist who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1937 with George P. Thomson of England for discovering that electrons can be diffracted like light waves, thus verifying the thesis of Louis de Broglie ...

  6. 5 de may. de 2024 · Overview. Clinton Joseph Davisson. (1881—1958) American physicist. Quick Reference. (1881–1958) American physicist. Davisson, who was born in Bloomington, Illinois, was educated at the University of Chicago and at Princeton, where he obtained his PhD in 1911.

  7. From 1930-1937 Dr. Davisson devoted himself to the study of the theory of electron optics and to applications of this theory to engineering problems. He then investigated the scattering and reflection of very slow electrons by metals. During World War II he worked on the theory of electronic devices and on a variety of crystal physics problems.