Resultado da Busca
Antony Hewish FRS FInstP (11 May 1924 – 13 September 2021) was a British radio astronomer who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1974 (together with fellow radio-astronomer Martin Ryle) for his role in the discovery of pulsars.
- British
- Pulsars
Antony Hewish (Fowey, 11 de maio de 1924 — 13 de setembro de 2021) foi um rádio astrônomo britânico que ganhou o Prêmio Nobel de Física em 1974 (junto com o colega radioastrônomo Martin Ryle) [1] por seu papel na descoberta de pulsares.
- Reino Unido
- Britânico
- 13 de setembro de 2021 (97 anos)
24 de set. de 2021 · A pioneer of radioastronomy, Antony Hewish won the Nobel Prize in 1974 for his role in the discovery of pulsars, magnetized, rotating neutron stars. He worked on radio scintillation, a technique to detect low-frequency radio sources, and co-authored papers on aperture synthesis and interplanetary weather. He died at 97.
- Malcolm Longair
- 2021
13 de mar. de 2024 · Antony Hewish (born May 11, 1924, Fowey, Cornwall, England—died September 13, 2021) was a British astrophysicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1974 for his discovery of pulsars (cosmic objects that emit extremely regular pulses of radio waves).
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Antony Hewish, a British astronomer who designed and built the innovative radio telescope used to discover pulsars — dense, fast-spinning stars that emit sweeping beams of radiation — and was...
Antony Hewish (1924–2021) was a pioneering radioastronomer who discovered the first pulsars with Jocelyn Bell and Martin Ryle. He also worked on radio scintillation, the technique that revealed the structure and stability of neutron stars, and on interplanetary weather.
17 de set. de 2021 · Antony Hewish, a pioneer of radio astronomy and a discoverer of a surprising class of stars known as pulsars, for which he was awarded a Nobel Prize, died on Monday. He was 97.