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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jesse_BeamsJesse Beams - Wikipedia

    Jesse Wakefield Beams (December 25, 1898 [1] in Belle Plaine, Kansas [2] – July 23, 1977 [3]) was an American physicist at the University of Virginia . Biography. Beams completed his undergraduate B.A. in physics at Fairmount College in 1921 and his master's degree the next year at the University of Wisconsin. [2] .

    • Carroll M. Sparrow
    • Development of the ultracentrifuge
    • Physics
  2. Physicist University of Virginia. Manhattan Project Veteran Scientist. Jesse Beams (1898-1977) was an American physicist. Beams worked on the Manhattan Project through his research on centrifuges. His ultracentrifuge was used to demonstrate the separation of U-235.

  3. Jesse W. Beams. 1967. National Medal of Science. Physical Sciences. For sustained and ingenious contributions to the scientific development of high-speed centrifuges, a family of devices that are now widely applied in the physical and biological sciences, in medicine, and in engineering scale isotope-separation.

  4. Beams then returned to the University of Virginia, where he remained on the faculty until his death in 1977. The UVa Physics Department maintains an archive of Jesse Beams' publications >> Dr. Beams' contributions include construction of the first linear electron accelerator, development of the magnetic ultracentrifuge and application of the ultracentrifuge to the separation of Uranium isotopes.

  5. Jesse W. Beams Collected Works. Papers, Book Chapters, and Abstracts. J. W. Beams, “A fusible alloy which solders glass to glass or glass to metal,” University of Virginia Journal of Engineering, March 1925, pp. 158-160 (1925a).

  6. American physicist. Learn about this topic in these articles: isotope separation techniques. In isotope: Gas centrifugation. The American physicist Jesse W. Beams used a gas centrifuge to separate isotopes, specifically the isotopes of chlorine, for the first time in 1936.

  7. 25 de jul. de 1977 · Jesse W. Beams, retired chairman of the physics department at the University of Virginia, whose decades of research using centrifuges won him the National Medal of Science in 1967, died of...