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Feynman

[ US /ˈfeɪnmən/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States physicist who contributed to the theory of the interaction of photons and electrons (1918-1988)

How To Use Feynman In A Sentence

  • To cite just a few examples : Willis Lamb, Julian Schwinger, Eugene Wigner, Richard Feynman, S. Tomonaga, C. D. Anderson, E. Segre, O. Chamberlain and many others.
  • The Feynman you could fit into a jeans pocket, if you rolled it up a bit.
  • For example, there's a short film of Dr. Richard Feynman explaining a principle of quantum mechanics called Bell's inequality.
  • Consider the problem: You're reading James Gleick's biography of Richard Feynman (1918-1988), a great scientist who helped chart the course of modern theoretical physics, was one of the builders of the atomic bomb during World War II and four decades later proved the most clearsighted member of the team investigating the Challenger space-shuttle explosion. Spin Doctor
  • The method is described in an article by Feynman et al.
  • This book is a transcription of four lectures given by Feynman at UCLA to a non-expert audience.
  • One of them is previously unacknowledged reader Carl Feynman, who wrote in about the bizarre SOHO image mentioned below.
  • The kids' favorite part (and, I suspect, everyone else's, too) was Feynman's retelling of his adventures as a safecracker.
  • When physicists write or say ‘as Newton/Einstein/Bohr/Feynman once said…’, it immediately gives them authority by closely identifying them with one of the giants of physics - or so they think.
  • Almost half a century since Feynman's discoveries, they remain cornerstones of theoretical physics.
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