Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Shockley trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
Books about Shockley.
Shockley of Godolphin jumping.
Unfortunately, neither did Shockley.
William Shockley after winning Nobel Prize.
Transistors have revolutionized electronics since they were first invented over half a century ago by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain,and William Shockley.
Mọi người cũng dịch
Shockley described them as the traitorous eight.
The first transistor was invented by shockley and his co-workers at bell labs.
Shockley referred to the group as“The Traitorous Eight”.
Bardeen and Brattain eventually did call Shockley to tell him about what they had discovered.
Shockley called his defecting employees the"traitorous eight.".
They became known as the traitorous eight and Shockley told them that they would never be successful.
Shockley referred to this group of scientists as the‘traitorous eight'.
HP is recognized as the symbolic founder of Silicon Valley, although it did not investigate semiconductor devices until a few years afterthe"traitorous eight" had abandoned William Shockley to create Fairchild Semiconductor in 1957.
William Shockley may have fathered the transistor, but two of his research scientists actually built it.
He came in ninth, ahead of astronomer Edwin Hubble, physicist Enrico Fermi, philosopher and economist John Maynard Keynes,transistor inventor William Shockley, biochemists James Watson and Francis Crick who discovered the double helix pattern of DNA, polio vaccine developer Jonas Salk, and world wide web creator Tim Berners-Lee.
Shockley was a difficult man, and in 1957 his top people-“the traitorous eight”- left to start a new company, Fairchild Semiconductor.
Relying on firsthand experience with severe nerve pain,author Sarah Anne Shockley accompanies you on your journey through pain and offers compassionate, practical advice to ease difficult emotions and address lifestyle challenges.
Shockley, John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain of the Bell Telephone Laboratories opened the door for more compact devices and led to the development of the integrated circuit in 1958 by Jack Kilby and independently in 1959 by Robert Noyce.
Legal papers from the Bell Labs patent show that William Shockley and a co-worker at Bell Labs, Gerald Pearson, had built operational versions from Lilienfeld's patents, yet they never referenced this work in any of their later research papers or historical articles.
Sarah Anne Shockley is a multiple award-winning producer and director of educational films, including Dancing From the Inside Out, a highly acclaimed documentary on disabled dance.
Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley were briefly reunited a few years later when they shared the world's top science award, the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics, for their discovery.
After Shockley had developed a model for the pn junction, Bell Laboratories produced the first solar cell in 1954; the efficiency of this, in converting light into electricity, was about 5%.
The team, led by Shockley, had been trying to develop a new kind of amplifier for the US telephone system- but what they actually invented turned out to have much more widespread applications.
In 1956, Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory, the first company to develop silicon semiconductor devices in what came to be known as Silicon Valley, was established in the city by William Shockley.
John Shockley, a meteorologist from Wichita, Kansas, reported that, using the state Weather Bureau radar, he tracked a number of odd aerial objects flying at altitudes between about 6000 and 9000 feet.
Although Shockley was not involved in the invention, and has never been listed on patent applications, Bell Labs decided that Shockley must appear on all publicity photos along with Bardeen and Brattain.
Conspicuous examples are the works of Shockley, Bardeen, and Brattain which led to the transistors and started a revolution in electronics, and the basic research by Townes, Basov, and Prokhorov which led to the development of masers and lasers.
In that year John Bardeen, William Shockley, and Walter Brattain of Bell Laboratories drew upon highly sophisticated principles of quantum physics to invent the transistor, a small substitute for the bulky vacuum tube.