Jerome I. Friedman

Jerome Friedman
2000-2001
Jerome I. Friedman
Tuesday, March 20, 2001
Wong Auditorium, E51
4 pm
Are We Really Made of Quarks?

Jerome Friedman, Institute Professor emeritus and one of a team of physicists who proved that quarks are real, said in his 2001 Killian Lecture that while the battle of the quark is over, the next step was to learn more about the particle’s structure. Professor Friedman shared the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics for pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics.” More at MIT News

Read the 2000 citation by the Killian Award Selection Committee

Related


  • John D. Joannopoulos

    John D. Joannopoulos

    Working at the Speed of Light
  • Peter Shor

    Peter Shor

    Quantum Computing
  • Wolfgang Ketterle

    Wolfgang Ketterle

    When Freezing Cold Is Not Cold Enough
  • Erich P. Ippen

    Erich P. Ippen

    Femtosecond Flashes and Their Effect on the Microscopic World
  • Daniel Kleppner

    Daniel Kleppner

    Views From a Garden of Worldly Delights
  • Mildred S. Dresselhaus

    Mildred S. Dresselhaus

    Adventures in Carbon Research
  • Philip Morrison

    Philip Morrison

    The Fruits of the Tree of Astronomy
  • Victor F. Weisskopf

    Victor F. Weisskopf

    “The Search for the Ultimate Structure of Matter” and “The Frontiers and Limits of Science”
  • Hermann A. Haus

    Hermann A. Haus

    “On Learning and Teaching and Electrodynamics” and “Noise, the Uncertainty Principle, and Picosecond Optics”
  • Chia-Chiao Lin

    Chia-Chiao Lin

    Topics in Applied Mathematics