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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Elmer_ImesElmer Imes - Wikipedia

    Elmer Samuel Imes (October 12, 1883 – September 11, 1941) was an internationally renowned American physicist who made important contributions in quantum, demonstrating for the first time that Quantum Theory could be applied to the rotational energy states of molecules, as well as the vibration and electronic levels, Imes' work ...

  2. The life and work of Elmer Samuel Imes. Although the second African American to receive a physics PhD in the US faced obstacles because of his race, he blazed trails in spectroscopy and pedagogy. Special Collection: Celebrating Black History. Ronald E. Mickens. Physics Today 71 (10), 28–35 (2018); https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.4042. PDF. Share.

  3. 7 de nov. de 2017 · Physicist Elmer S. Imes, an internationally recognized early authority on infrared spectroscopy, was born in Memphis, Tennessee, on October 12, 1883, the son of Benjamin Imes, a minister, and the former Elizabeth Wallace, an ex-slave. Both of his parents were alumni of Oberlin College in Ohio and worked as missionaries in the South.

  4. 17 de mar. de 2023 · Elmer Samuel Imes. Espectroscopía infrarroja. Haluros de hidrógeno. Historia de la Ciencia. Biografía. Segregación Racial. Resumen. Elmer Imes (1883-1941) fue la primera persona que caracterizó el espectro infrarrojo del cloruro de hidrógeno. Sus resultados pusieron fin al debate de la cuantización de los movimientos moleculares.

  5. Elmer Samuel Imes (1883-1941) was the second African-American to earn a Ph. D. in Physics (the first was Edward Bouchet, Yale PhD 1878). Imes, who completed his PhD at Michigan in 1918 under the direction of Harrison Randall, is among the first African American scientists to make important contributions to modern physics

  6. Resumen: Elmer Imes (1883-1941) fue la primera persona que caracterizó el espectro infrarrojo del cloruro. de hidrógeno. Sus resultados pusieron fin al debate de la cuantización de los movimientos José Elguero moleculares. iD.

  7. Experimental spectroscoper Elmer Imes was the second African American to earn a doctorate in physics. He worked in spectroscopy and quantum mechanics, was involved in New York City’s Harlem Renaissance, and later went on to establish Fisk University’s Physics Department. American Institute of Physics. AIP Publishing.