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  1. Marshall Rosenbluth was an American physicist who worked on the hydrogen bomb project at Los Alamos during the Cold War. He was recruited by Edward Teller to come to Los Alamos in 1950. He witnessed some nuclear tests in the South Pacific. He helped develop the Metropolis algorithm. He received…

  2. marshall n. rosenbluth 407 Princeton. Rosenbluth himself traveled indefatigably to Garching and Novosibirsk, to Culham and Tsukuba, wherever in the world fusion research was pursued. He was one of the strongest links holding together the worldwide fraternity of plasma physicists. For thirteen years, Rosenbluth’s gang of young plasma physicists

  3. Leben und Wirken. Rosenbluth studierte an der Harvard University, diente aber während des Studiums ab 1944 als Freiwilliger in der US-Navy.Nach seinem Ausscheiden aus dem Militär schloss er 1946 sein Studium ab. 1949 promovierte Rosenbluth an der University of Chicago über ein Thema aus der Hochenergiephysik, sein Doktorvater war Edward Teller. 1949/50 war er in Stanford, wo er die ...

  4. 26 de mai. de 1994 · Marshall Rosenbluth was an American physicist who worked in the theoretical division at Los Alamos from 1950 to 1956. In this interview, Rosenbluth addresses the theoretical issues involved in designing both the atomic and hydrogen bombs.

  5. www.utphysicshistory.net › MarshallNRosenbluthUTPhysicsHistorySite

    Marshall N. Rosenbluth. Marshall N. Rosenbluth was born in Albany, New York, February 5, 1927 to Robert (1887–1975) and Margaret Sondheim (1896–1960) Rosenbluth. His brother was Lehman C. Rosenbluth, (1930–1992). who was a graduate of New York Community College of Applied Arts and Sciences in Brooklyn, NY. He became an accountant in Chicago.

  6. 28 de set. de 2003 · Abstract. Marshall Rosenbluth was Professor Emeritus at University of California, San Diego (1993-2003). Other institutional affiliations included University of Texas, Austin, the Institute for Advanced Study, General Atomics, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. His research interests included plasma physics and controlled fusion.

  7. Rosenbluth died in 2003. The Marshall Rosenbluth Papers document Rosenbluth's research and writings in the field of plasma physics and the commercial use of fusion as an energy source. The collection is arranged in six series: 1) CORRESPONDENCE, 2) WRITINGS, 3) SPEECHES AND REMARKS, 4) TRANSPARENCIES, 5) BIOGRAPHICAL, and 6) MISCELLANEOUS.