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  1. EUGENE WIGNER. Eugene Paul Wigner was born in Budapest, Hungary, on November 17. 1902, into a middle class family of Jewish heritage. His father was director and minority owner in a leather factory. He attended the Lutheran high school in Budapest where he met and became friends with the mathematician John von Neumann.

  2. Eugene Wigner died on 1 January 1995 in Princeton, where he was also laid to rest. The new physics building at Technische Universität Berlin is named after him. Eugene Paul Wigner (1902-1995) studied and taught at Technische Hochschule zu Berlin. In 1963 he received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his research on symmetry principles in nuclear ...

  3. Eugene Paul Wigner (usually E. P. Wigner among physicists) (November 17, 1902 – January 1, 1995) was a Hungarian physicist and mathematician.He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963, "for his contributions to the theory of the atomic nucleus and the elementary particles, particularly through the discovery and application of fundamental symmetry principles."

  4. Eugene Paul Wigner (Hongaars: Wigner Pál Jenő), (Boedapest, 17 november 1902 – Princeton (New Jersey), 1 januari 1995) was een Hongaars-Amerikaans natuurkundige en wiskundige van Joodse afkomst. Hij ontving in 1963 de Nobelprijs voor de Natuurkunde "voor zijn bijdragen aan de theorie van de atoomkernen en de elementaire deeltjes, vooral door de ontdekking en de toepassing van fundamentele ...

  5. Eugene Paul Wigner was born n Budapest, Hungary, on November 17, 1902. In 1921, he graduated from the Lutheran Gymnasium and went on to study at the Technische Universitat Berlin, receiving his Ph.D. in chemical engineering. In the late 1920s, Wigner explored deeply in the field of quantum mechanics, devoting himself to physics.

  6. Premio Nobel de Física 1963. Eugene Paul Wigner. Fue un físico y matemático húngaro. Uno de los cinco científicos que informaron al presidente Franklin D. Roosevelt en 1939 de la posible utilización militar de la energía atómica, y durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial contribuyó al diseño de reactores de plutonio.

  7. Eugene Paul Wigner (húngaru: Wigner Pál Jenő; 17 de payares de 1902, Budapest – 1 de xineru de 1995, Princeton) foi un físicu y matemáticu húngaru que recibió'l Premiu Nobel de Física en 1963 (xunto a J. Hans D. Jensen y Maria Goeppert-Mayer) "pola so contribución a la teoría del nucleu atómicu y de les partícules elementales, cuantimás pol descubrimientu y aplicación de los ...