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  • Physics: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) Helen Quinn, theoretician. Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) experiment, Menlo Park, California. With a length of 3km, the Stanford Linear Accelerator is the largest of its kind in the world. The accelerator is used to produce streams of electrons and positrons, which collide at a combined energy of 100 GeV (Giga electron Volts). This massive energy is sufficient to produce Z-zero particles in the collision. The Z-zero is one of the mediators of the weak nuclear force, the force behind radioactive decay, and was first discovered at CERN, Geneva, in 1983. The first Z-zero at SLC was produced on 11 April 1989. MODEL RELEASED [1986].
    USA_SCI_PHY_05_xs.jpg
  • Professor Boris Rubinsky at University of California Berkeley, Department of Bioengineering and Mechanical Engineering. He developed the first "bionic chip", in which a biological cell is part of the actual electronic circuitry, invented with graduate student Yong Huang. MODEL RELEASED [2001]
    USA_SCI_PHY_04_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Samuel C.C. Ting (b.1936), Project Director of the L-3 Detector Experiment at CERN's Large Electron- Positron Collider (LEP). Sam Ting won the 1976 Nobel Prize for physics (shared with Burton Richter), following his discovery of the J/Psi particle at the Brookhaven Laboratory in 1974. The J/Psi particle, and the Psi-prime particle discovered by Richter, implied the existence of two new quarks, Charm and anti-Charm. The L-3 experiment at CERN is designed to search for the fundamental particles of nature and the mechanism by which they receive their mass. MODEL RELEASED [1988]
    SWI_SCI_PHY_03_xs.jpg
  • English lesson in classroom at the school in Gaselo, Bhutan. Nalim's daughter Bangam is in attendance (though out of frame). Children in Bangam's class range from 6 to 17 in age, some of who travel several hours to attend. The school is an hour walk from their home in Shingkhey, Bhutan. From Peter Menzel's Material World Project.
    Bhu_mw_19_xxs.jpg
  • Burton Richter (born 1931), American physicist and director of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) since 1984. Richter has drawn the letter Z with his torch light, representing the Z-zero particle, one of the mediators of the weak nuclear force. In the 1960s, Richter worked on the Stanford electron storage rings, the first accelerator to collide subatomic particles together. In 1970-72, he directed the building of the SPEAR electron- positron Collider at SLAC, which yielded his discovery of the J/psi particle in 1974. For this work, Richter shared the 1976 Nobel prize in physics with Sam Ting, whose team at Brookhaven had also found the same particle. MODEL RELEASED [1986].
    USA_SCI_PHY_03_xs.jpg
  • Physics: British theoretical physicist Professor Peter Higgs in his University office in Edinburgh, Scotland (b. 1929). In 1964, Higgs predicted the existence of a new type of fundamental particle, commonly called the Higgs boson. This particle is required by many of the current Grand Unified Theories (or GUTs), which hope to explain three of the fundamental forces (electromagnetism, the weak & the strong nuclear forces) in a single unified theory. The Higgs boson is yet to be detected experimentally, but it is one of the main challenges of high-energy particle accelerators now being built. Higgs is professor of theoretical physics at Edinburgh University. MODEL RELEASED [1988]
    GBR_SCI_PHY_05_xs.jpg
  • Physics: Geneva, Switzerland/CERN: John Bell (b.1928), Theoretical Physicist. John Bell was a theoretical physicist at CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics. He invented the "Bell inequalities" which allowed a better understanding of the foundations of quantum mechanics, the physics of the very small. MODEL RELEASED [1987]
    SWI_SCI_PHY_01_xs.jpg
  • Nine-year-old Visith Khuenkaew, left, and his fellow third grade classmates work on math problems at school near their village of Ban Muang Wa, Thailand. Published in Material World, page 84. The Khuenkaew family lives in a wooden 728-square-foot house on stilts, surrounded by rice fields in the Ban Muang Wa village, outside the northern town of Chiang Mai, in Thailand.
    Tha_mw_4_xxs.jpg
  • Lunchtime at nine-year-old Mio Ukita's classroom at school in Kodaira City, Japan. Material World Project. The Ukita family lives in a 1421 square foot wooden frame house in a suburb northwest of Tokyo called Kodaira City.
    Japan_Jap_mw_14_xs.jpg
  • English lesson in classroom at the school in Gaselo, Bhutan. Nalim's daughter Bangam is in attendance (although out of frame). Children in Bangam's class range from 6 to 17 in age. The school is an hour's walk from Shingkhey Village. Bhutan. From Peter Menzel's Material World Project.
    Bhu_mw_730_xs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). The Costa grandsons, Javier (right) and Ariel, exercise daily on the roof of the family home in Havana, Cuba. Behind them are a blackboard with math homework and cages for the family's pigeons. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CUB01_0023_xf1bs.jpg
  • Nine-year-old Visith Khuenkaew, (at the blackboard on the right), and his fellow third grade classmates work on math problems at school near their village of Ban Muang Wa, Thailand. The Khuenkaew family lives in a wooden 728-square-foot house on stilts, surrounded by rice fields in the Ban Muang Wa village, outside the northern town of Chiang Mai, in Thailand. Material World Project.
    Tha_mw_702_xs.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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