Physics Nobel Prizes
1948, United Kingdom, for his development of the Wilson cloud chamber method and research into cosmic radiation
Patrick Blackett
1907, United States, for his optical precision instruments and the spectroscopic and meteorological investigations carried out with their aid
Albert A. Michelson
1921, Germany, explanation of the photoelectric effect
Albert Einstein
1927, United States and United Kingdom(respectively), a pair, founded Compton effect and found method for making paths of electricity charged particles visible by condensation of vapor
Arthur Holly Compton and Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
1930, India, discovered that when light transverses a transparent material some of the deflected light changes wavelength
C. V. Raman
1950, United Kingdom, for his development of the photographic method of studying nuclear processes
Cecil Powell
1917, United Kingdom, discovery of the characteristic Rontgen radiation of the elements
Charles Barkla
1920, Switzerland, discovery of anomalies in nickle-steel alloys
Charles Edouard Guillaume
1937, United States and United Kingdom, experimental discovery of the diffraction of electrons by crystals
Clinton Davisson and George Thomson
1960, United State, for his invention of the bubble chamber
Donald Glaser
1947, United Kingdom, investigations into physics of the upper atmosphere
Edward Appleton
1938, Italy, explanation of nuetron irradiation and for discovery of nuclear reactions brought by slow neutons
Enrico Fermi
1939, United States, for the invention and development of the cyclotron
Ernest Lawrence
1933, Austria and United Kingdom, a pair, discovery of new form of atomic theory using electron shells
Erwin Schrodinger and Paul Dirac
1953, Netherlands, for his invention of the phase contrast microscope
Frits Zernike
1908, France, for his method of reproducing color photograph based on the phenomenon of interference
Gabriel Lippmann
1909, Italy and German(respectively), pair, contributions to the development of wireless telegrahy
Guglielmo Marconi and Karl Ferdinand Braun
1912, Sweden, invention of automatic regulators for use in conjunction with gas accumulators for lighthouses
Gustaf Dalen
1913, Netherlands, for his investigations of the properties of matter low temperatures which lead to the production of liquid helium
Heike Kamerlingh-Onnes
1902, Netherlands, 2 people, discovery and explanation of the Zeeman effect
Hendrick Lorentz and Pieter Zeeman
1903, France, 3 people, discovery of spontaneous radioactivity
Henri Becquerel, Pierre Curie, Maria Curie
1949, Japan, for his prediction of the existence of mesons
Hideki Yukawa
1944, United States, for his resonance method for recording the magnetic properties of atomic nuclei
Isidor Isaac Rabi
1906, United Kingdom, for the discovery of the electron and his work on the conduction of electricity in gases
J.J. Thompson
1935, United Kingdom, discovered the neutron
James Chadwick
1925, Germany, pair, research into inelastic electron collisions in gases and the effects
James Franck and Gustav Hertz
1926, France, for his work on discontinuous structure of matter and sedimentation equilibrium
Jean Baptiste Perrin
1910, Netherlands, for his work on the equation of state for gases and liquids and forces named after him
Johannes Diderik van der Waals
1919, Germany, for his discovery of the Doppler effect in canal rays and the splitting of spectral lines in electric fields
Johannes Stark
1904, United Kingdom, discovered argon and investigations of the densities of gases
Lord Rayleigh
1929, France, helped to explain wave-particle duality and discovered the wave nature of the electron
Louis de Broglie
1924, Sweden, for his more accurate x-ray fields and measurement with such instruments
Manne Siegbahn
1918, Germany, discovery of energy quanta
Max Planck
1914, Germany, for his discovery of the diffraction X-rays by crystals, an important step in the development of X-ray spectroscopy
Max von Laue
1922, Denmark, for his model of the atom and the radiation emanating from them
Niels Bohr
1943, United States, for the discovery of the magnetic moment of the proton
Otto Stern
1959, United States, pair, for their discovery of the antiproton
Owen Chamberlain and Emilio Segre
1928, United Kingdom, for his work on thermionic emission and the law named after him
Owen Willans Richardson
1946, United States, for the invention of devices useful for high pressure physics
Percy Williams Bridgman
1905, Austria-Hungary, for his work with cathode rays
Philipp Lenard
1965, United States and Japan, a trio, for their fundamental work in quantum electrodynamic
Richard Feynman, Julian Schwinger, and Sin-Itrio Tomonaga
1923, United States, developed elementary charge of electron, oil drop experiment
Robert Millikan
1936, Austria and United States, discovery of cosmic radiation and the discovery of the positron(respectively)
Victor Hess and Carl Anderson
1911, Germany, for his work with heat radiation and his displacement law
Welhelm Wien
1932, Germany, for the creation of quantum mechanics, discovery of allotropic forms of hydrogen
Werner Heisenberg
1901, German, produced and detected X-rays
Wilhelm Rontgen
1915, United Kingdom, pair, for their analysis of crystal structure by means X-rays, and important step in the development of X-ray crystallography
William Henry Bragg and William Lawrence Bragg
1945, Austria, for his Exclusion Principle
Wolfgang Pauli