Thomas Lauritsen
#124,235
Most Influential Person Across History
American physicist
Thomas Lauritsen's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Physics
Thomas Lauritsen's Degrees
- PhD Physics University of California, Berkeley
- Bachelors Physics University of Copenhagen
Why Is Thomas Lauritsen Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Thomas Lauritsen was an American nuclear physicist best known for his abilities at designing and building experimental facilities and instrumentation for experimental nuclear physics; and as the longtime co-author of a periodic compilation of nuclear data. Except for brief periods abroad, his career was entirely at the California Institute of Technology, mostly as a professor of physics. In 1969 he was elected as a member of the National Academy of Sciences and also the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Thomas Lauritsen's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Energy levels of light nuclei. VI (1959) (803)
- Energy levels of light nuclei (VII). A = 5–10 (1966) (398)
- Energy Levels of Light Nuclei. V (1955) (212)
- Energy levels of light nuclei. (1948) (168)
- Velocity-Range Relation for Fission Fragments (1940) (146)
- B-12, C-12, and the Red Giants (1957) (126)
- Energy Levels of Light Nuclei. IV (1952) (111)
- Gamma-Radiation from Excited States of Light Nuclei (1948) (88)
- Energy levels of light nuclei. III (1950) (68)
- Introduction to modern physics (68)
- Energy Levels of Light Nuclei (1951) (56)
- HIGH-ENERGY ALPHA PARTICLES FROM B$sup 1$$sup 2$ (1958) (26)
- Gamma-Ray Measurements with a Magnetic Lens Spectrometer (1949) (21)
- A Simple Quartz Fiber Electrometer (1937) (19)
- The Beta-Decay of B$sup 12$ and Li$sup 8$ (1950) (19)
- The conservation of momentum in the disintegration of Li8 (1947) (18)
- Nuclear Pairs and Gamma-Radiation from Excited States ofO16 (1950) (18)
- Scattering of Deuterons in Helium (1953) (17)
- Magnetic Lens Spectrometer Measurements of the Radiations from Light Nuclear Reactions (1952) (16)
- Range and Straggling of Fission Fragments (1941) (12)
- Application of a Pressure Electrostatic Generator to the Transmutation of Light Elements by Protons (1941) (10)
- Appendix: Energy Levels of the Light Nuclei (1960) (10)
- Angular Correlation of Alpha Particles from Decay of Li8 (1958) (9)
- A Null-Reading Fluxmeter (1948) (9)
- Doppler Broadening of a Gamma-Ray Line (1949) (9)
- AN ISOSPIN 3/2 LEVEL OF BE9, (1965) (8)
- Electrostatic analyzer for 1.5-mev protons. (1947) (7)
- Cloud-Chamber Studies of Fission Fragment Tracks (1940) (7)
- Gamma-radiation from deuteron bombardment of Be$sup 9$ (1949) (7)
- Energy levels of light nuclei (VII) A=11-12 (1966) (6)
- High Energy Gamma-Radiation fromBe9+D2 (1949) (3)
- Energy levels of light nuclei, May 1962 (1962) (3)
- Excited States of B 10 (1948) (3)
- The Beta-Decay Spectra of B$sup 12$ and Li$sup 8$ (1948) (3)
- Excited States of B10 (1948) (3)
- A radiation meter for disaster use. (1950) (2)
- Internal Conversion Pairs in Carbon (1948) (1)
- Energy Levels of Light Nuclei A = 5 to A = 20 (1961) (1)
- Manned Barrier Systems: A Preliminary Study (1967) (0)
- List of symbols (1961) (0)
- Kellogg Laboratory: The Early Years (1969) (0)
- A T = 3/2 LEVEL IN Be9 (1963) (0)
- The apparatus of nuclear physics. (1949) (0)
- Construction of a pressure Van de Graaff generator and its application to nuclear physics (1939) (0)
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