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  1. Arthur B. McDonald (Sídney, Nueva Escocia; 29 de agosto de 1943) es un astrofísico canadiense, director del Observatorio de Neutrinos de Sudbury. También conserva la cátedra Gordon y Patricia Silla Gray en Astrofísica de Partículas en la Universidad de Queen en Kingston ( Ontario ).

  2. Arthur Bruce McDonald, CC OOnt ONS FRS FRSC P.Eng (born August 29, 1943) is a Canadian astrophysicist. McDonald is the director of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory Collaboration and held the Gordon and Patricia Gray Chair in Particle Astrophysics at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario from 2006 to 2013.

  3. 16 de may. de 2024 · Arthur B. McDonald (born August 29, 1943, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada) is a Canadian physicist who was awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering the oscillations of neutrinos from one flavor (electron, muon, or tau) to another, which proved that these subatomic particles had mass.

  4. Arthur B. McDonald. The Nobel Prize in Physics 2015. Born: 29 August 1943, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada. Affiliation at the time of the award: Queen's University, Kingston, Canada.

  5. Biographical. I was born in 1943 in Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada, a city of about 30,000 people on Cape Breton Island. My mother’s and father’s families were Scottish and French settlers who had come to Atlantic Canada in the 1700s and early 1800s. My father was a Lieutenant in the Canadian Army and left for Europe when I was about a year ...

  6. 4 de nov. de 2020 · Arthur McDonald creció en Nueva Escocia en una comunidad que hacía todo lo posible por sus jóvenes. Cuando todavía era joven, McDonald recibió las herramientas que necesitaba para convertirse en matemático y, finalmente, en físico, lo que enorgullecería a su ciudad natal de Sydney.

  7. An interest in mechanics led Queen's researcher Arthur McDonald, the 2015 co-winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics, to study the universe on a fundamental level, through physics.