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Leo Esaki (江崎 玲於奈? transcripción correcta Esaki Reona; también conocido como Esaki Leona) ( Osaka, Japón, 12 de marzo de 1925 - ) es un físico japonés que recibió, junto con Ivar Giaever y Brian David Josephson, el Premio Nobel de Física de 1973 por el descubrimiento del efecto túnel del electrón.
Reona Esaki (江崎 玲於奈 Esaki Reona, born March 12, 1925), also known as Leo Esaki, is a Japanese physicist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1973 with Ivar Giaever and Brian David Josephson for his work in electron tunneling in semiconductor materials which finally led to his invention of the Esaki diode, which ...
The IBM researcher earned the Nobel Prize for his discoveries in electron tunneling and changed the consumer electronics industry. When Leo Esaki first visited IBM’s Yorktown headquarters in 1959, he knew the company had big ambitions. “There was a strong feeling of growth,” Esaki later told THINK magazine. “There was an aura of, ‘We ...
Since 1969, Esaki has, with his colleagues, pioneered “designed semiconductor quantum structures” such as man-made superlattices, exploring a new quantum regime in the frontier of semiconductor physics. The Nobel Prize in Physics (1973) was awarded in recognition of his pioneering work on electron tunneling in solids.
Leo Esaki (born March 12, 1925, Ōsaka, Japan) is a Japanese solid-state physicist and researcher in superconductivity who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973 with Ivar Giaever and Brian Josephson.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Born: 12 March 1925, Osaka, Japan. Affiliation at the time of the award: IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA. Prize motivation: “for their experimental discoveries regarding tunneling phenomena in semiconductors and superconductors, respectively”. Prize share: 1/4.
Leo Esaki es un físico japonés que recibió, junto con Ivar Giaever y Brian David Josephson, el Premio Nobel de Física de 1973 por el descubrimiento del efecto túnel del electrón. Es también conocido por la invención del diodo de Esaki, que aprovechaba tal fenómeno.