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Theodore H. Geballe is an American physicist who is an emeritus professor of applied physics at Stanford University. He is known for his work on the synthesis of novel materials of interest to several areas of physics and many interdisciplinary sciences. ==Biography== Theodore Geballe was born and brought up in a Jewish family in San Francisco, California. His grandfather left the Province of Posen in Prussia to move to the United States during the First World War. He attended the Galileo High School in San Francisco, graduating in 1937. Geballe then travelled across the San Francisco Bay to attend college at the University of California, Berkeley. While still an undergraduate student at Berkeley, Geballe worked at William Giauque's lab to accurately measure the specific heat of gold. In 1941, Geballe was called to active duty as an Army Ordnance Officer during the Second World War. Geballe served in Australia, New Guinea and the Philippines and was responsible for maintaining guns. After the war, Geballe returned to Berkeley as a graduate student of Giauque, graduating in 1949 - the same year that Giauque won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. In 1952, he moved to Bell labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey. While at Bell labs, he worked on studying transport properties in semiconductors at very low temperatures, and also on studying properties of unconventional superconductors. In 1967, Geballe joined Stanford University as a professor in the newly founded Department of Applied Physics as well as the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. Geballe was involved in research in the then-upcoming field of multilayered heterostructure materials. Geballe served as the head of the Department of Applied Physics at Stanford from 1975-1977, and was the director of the Center for Materials Research from 1978-1988. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Theodore H. Geballe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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