Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 26, 2024 · Transistors have revolutionized electronics since they were first invented over half a century ago by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley. But what are they—and how do they work? Photo: An insect with three legs? No, a typical transistor on an electronic circuit board.

  2. Sep 11, 2024 · transistor The first transistor, invented by American physicists John Bardeen, Walter H. Brattain, and William B. Shockley. Bardeen’s conjecture spurred a basic research program at Bell Labs into the behaviour of these “surface-state” electrons.

  3. Sep 21, 2024 · "Bardeen, John" published on by Oxford University Press. US physicist, whose invention of the point-contact transistor and the theory to explain superconductivity won him two Nobel Prizes, the first physicist to do so....

  4. 3 days ago · Meanwhile, on 30 June 1948, Bell Labs announced John Bardeen and Walter Brattain’s game-changing invention of the transistor. No longer would electronics be dependent on large, hot vacuum tubes.

  5. Sep 11, 2024 · The transistor was invented in 1947–48 by three American physicists, John Bardeen, Walter H. Brattain, and William B. Shockley, at the American Telephone and Telegraph Company’s Bell Laboratories. The transistor proved to be a viable alternative to the electron tube and, by the late 1950s, supplanted the latter in many applications.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TransistorTransistor - Wikipedia

    2 days ago · The first working device was a point-contact transistor invented in 1947 by physicists John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley at Bell Labs; the three shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics for their achievement. [4]

  7. Sep 16, 2024 · Shared the 1972 Nobel Prize in Physics with faculty member John Bardeen and alumnus John R. Schreiffer for their development of the theory of superconductivity, usually called the BCS-theory. He was a research associate at the U of I from 1955 to 1957.