Murray Freezing-Mann

Murray Freezing-Mann is an American physicist born in 1929, professor in Californian Institute off Technology (Caltech). It accepted the Nobel Prize of physics in 1969 for its work on the theory of the Quark S of which he is the inventor. He was also prize winner of the Franklin Médaille in 1967.

Physicist recognized in the field of research on the elementary particles of the Physical , it is regarded as great scientific broad-mindedness which does not hesitate to cause the bringing together of completely opposite scientific disciplines.

In its book the Quark and the Jaguar it shows for example how the physics of the particles and the theory of the evolution are two intrinsically dependant theories: it compares the mechanism of the evolution like particles carrying out of small quantum jumps towards stable conditions and this in an irreversible way (see the article Attracteur), which according to him would be at the origin of the biological diversity of all the alive species on our planet.

In the same book, it also regulates some own accounts, in a way not making him always honor: by denouncing Seeger Pete (by its initial, but with a description not leaving any ambiguity) and by finding the means of speaking about the experiment of Alain Aspect without quoting the name of this one only once.

Random links:Ficción | Saki Hiwatari | Allocyttus | Foundry (electronic) | Transcription of the Chinese languages | Roots of the sky (film) | Polydora