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  1. Edward Teller (15 de Enero 1908, Budapest, Hungría – 9 Septiembre 2003, Estados Unidos) ligó su nombre a la historia por sus muchas contribuciones en el campo de la física nuclear, siendo especialmente conocido por el desarrollo de la bomba de hidrógeno. Nacido en Hungría, entonces aún parte del Imperio austrohúngaro, Teller conoció de primera mano los abusos de los regímenes ...

  2. Edward Teller was a Jewish Hungarian theoretical physicist who is known colloquially as "the father of the hydrogen bomb." Teller (born January 15, 1908; died Septeber 9, 2003) was born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary, in 1908. He graduated in chemical engineering at Karlsruhe, before earning his PHD in 1930 at the University of Leipzig studying ...

  3. 10 de sept. de 2003 · Edward Teller. The controversial physicist died yesterday at age 95. In the early morning of 1 November 1952, the island of Elugelab was engulfed by a brilliant orange fireball. The island-destroying hydrogen bomb was the crowning achievement of Edward Teller, who died yesterday at age 95. Teller, a Hungarian, studied under Werner Heisenberg in ...

  4. エドワード・テラー(Edward Teller、 もとのハンガリー名ではテッレル・エデ(Teller Ede)、 1908年 1月15日 - 2003年 9月9日)は、ハンガリー生まれでアメリカ合衆国に亡命したユダヤ人 理論物理学者である。アメリカ合衆国の「水爆の父」として知られる。

  5. 9 de sept. de 2003 · Date of Death: September 9, 2003. Born in Hungary in 1908, Edward Teller received his BS in chemical engineering from the University of Karlsruhe in Germany in 1928. In 1930 he received his PhD in physics from the University of Leipzig. Fearing the rise of Nazism, Teller left Germany in 1933, first to Denmark, then London, and finally the ...

  6. 21 de jul. de 2023 · Playing the physicist Edward Teller, who emigrated from Hungary in the 1930s, Safdie has a thick Eastern European accent as he engages in spirited debates with his fellow Los Alamos scientists.

  7. 16 de ene. de 2020 · Teller was more determined than ever to push for its development after the Soviet Union exploded an atomic bomb in 1949. This was a major reason why he was determined to lead the successful development and testing of the first hydrogen bomb. In 1952, Ernest Lawrence and Teller opened the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, where he was the ...

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