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  1. Marshall Rosenbluth was born in Albany, New York, on February 5, 1927. His intellectual gifts were already admired in Stuyvesant High School in New York City when he graduated in 1942. One of us (H. M.) met Marshall for the first time at this high school just as he was leaving to go to Harvard. Even then he was one of

  2. 20 de mar. de 2020 · Marshall Rosenbluth and Roald Sagdeev met there, and my eventual mentor at the Avco-Everett Research Laboratory, Harry Petschek (1930–2005), met Sagdeev there too. Years later, my plasma physics elders in America, Britain, and the Soviet Union recalled their astonishment that plasma physics research had followed the virtually the same path of development in the three countries before the ...

  3. Marshall Rosenbluth was an American physicist who worked in the theoretical division at Los Alamos from 1950 to 1956. In this interview, Rosenbluth addresses the theoretical issues involved in designing both the atomic and hydrogen bombs. He discusses how the pressure to create a nuclear bomb before the Soviet Union…

  4. Marshall Rosenbluth was an outstanding scientist affectionately known as “the pope of plasma physics” because of his contribution to nuclear fusion. His great ambition was to demonstrate that ...

  5. Physical Review Link Manager

  6. This is, in a nutshell, a 1953 article by Nicholas Metropolis, Arianna and Marshall Rosenbluth and Augusta and Edward Teller. The paper, published in the Journal of Chemical Physics introduced the ...

  7. 28 de abr. de 2005 · The algorithm described in this publication, known as the Metropolis algorithm, is described, reconstructs the historical context in which it was developed, and summarizes Marshall Rosenbluth's recollections. The 1953 publication, “Equation of State Calculations by Very Fast Computing Machines” by N. Metropolis, A. W. Rosenbluth and M. N. Rosenbluth, and M. Teller and E. Teller [J. Chem ...