Enrico Fermi
Enrico Fermi (Italian: Enrico Fermi, September 29, 1901 - November 28, 1954), American-American physicist, "proves the new radioactivity that can be generated by neutron irradiation The presence of elements, as well as the discovery of nuclear reactions by slow neutrons, which are released by fission products decay, not directly from uranium fuels, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1938. But also to teach the most Nobel Prize winner of physics. Fermi is recognized as one of the chief physics masters of the twentieth century and has made a significant contribution to theoretical physics and experimental physics. He pioneered the theory of β decay, is the weak theory of interaction leading, responsible for the design and construction of the world's first self-sustained chain fission nuclear reactor. He is also the main leader of the Manhattan project. He is known as the father of the atomic bomb with Robert Oppenheimer. Named after his Fermi gold rules, Fermi - Dirac statistics, fermions, Fermi surface, Fermi liquid and Fermi constant and so on. ...