Fluid Mechanics Lectures for Scientists and Engineers 25 lectures 43, views. Physical Applications of Stochastic Processes 29 lectures 26, views. Moment of Inertia 9 lectures 33, views. Hans Bethe Lectures. Start Course Visit Official Site. Course Description In , legendary theoretical physicist Hans Bethe delivered three lectures on quantum theory to his neighbors at the Kendal of Ithaca retirement community near Cornell University.
Displaying 1 comment: MJK wrote 12 years ago. He relates his personal knowledge of the founders of quantum theory, including, Planck, Einstein, Sommerfeld, Bohr, and Born, in this non-technical discussion. Posting Comment Disclaimer: CosmoLearning is promoting these materials solely for nonprofit educational purposes, and to recognize contributions made by Cornell University Cornell to online education.
All intellectual property rights are reserved to Cornell and involved parties. CosmoLearning is not endorsed by Cornell, and we are not affiliated with them, unless otherwise specified. In Professsor Bethe returned to the theory of nuclei, emphasizing a different phase. Since then, he examined the theory of nuclear matter whose aim it is to explain the properties of atomic nuclei in terms of the forces acting between nucleons. During the s and s, Professor Bethe campaigned for the peaceful use of nuclear energy.
After the Chernobyl disaster, he put together a committee of experts that analyzed the incident and concluded that a similar episode would not happen in any good US reactor.
Throughout his life, he remained a strong advocate for nuclear energy. In the s, Professor Bethe and other physicists opposed the Strategic Defense Initiative missile system conceived by the Ronald Reagan administration. Strominger is the Gwill E. A renowned theoretical physicist, he has made significant contributions to classical and quantum gravity, quantum field theory and string theory.
In his most recent work, Strominger discovered an exact equivalence unifying three disparate phenomena which have been separately studied for the last half-century: quantum field theory soft theorems, asymptotic symmetries and the memory effect. This equivalence has deep implications for infrared phenomena ranging from quantum electrodynamics to the black hole information paradox.
These lectures are open only to the Cornell community.
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