Brian D. Josephson AKA Brian David Josephson Born: 4-Jan-1940 Birthplace: Cardiff, Glamorgan, Wales
Gender: Male Religion: Jewish Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Nationality: Wales Executive summary: Discovered the Josephson Effect Welsh physicist Brian D. Josephson was still a graduate student in 1962 when he discovered the Josephson effect, explaining how an electrical current can flow between two superconductors (materials with zero electrical resistance) even when an insulator between them would be expected to block the current. This led to development of the Josephson switch, allowing extreme high-speed switching on the molecular level. For his discovery, Josephson was one of three scientists who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1973.
Since the late 1970s his work has focused on the brain and paranormal phenomena including telepathy, which he believes may be related to quantum mechanics. He has stated that scientific papers on topics such as cold fusion, Eastern mysticism, and homeopathy are systematically rejected at leading science journals. In a 2007 letter to Physics Journal, he said he had visited three laboratories where the widely-discredited cold fusion experiments of Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons have been replicated, but that reports of such successes have been suppressed. Father: Abraham Josephson Mother: Mimi Weisbard Josephson Wife: Carol Anne Olivier (m. 1976, one daughter)
High School: Cardiff High School, Cardiff, Wales (1956) University: BA Physics, Trinity College, Cambridge University (1960) University: MA and PhD Physics, Trinity College, Cambridge University (1964) Fellow: Trinity College, Cambridge University (1962) Teacher: Physics, University of Illinois (1964-65) Scholar: Physics, Cambridge University (1967-72) Scholar: Physics, Cornell University (1971-72) Teacher: Reader in Physics, Cambridge University (1972-74) Professor: Physics, Trinity College, Cambridge University (1974-)
New Scientist Award 1969
Research Corporation Award 1969
Fritz London Memorial Prize 1970
Elliott Cresson Gold Medal of the Franklin Institute 1972
IOP Guthrie Medal and Prize 1972
Hughes Medal 1972 URSI Van der Pol Medal 1972
IOP Fernand Holweck Prize 1972
Nobel Prize for Physics 1973 (with Leo Esaki and Ivar Giaever) IET Faraday Medal 1982
Institute of Physics Fellow
National Science Foundation Fellowship, 1971-72 Royal Society 1970 IEEE 1982 American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1974 Jewish Ancestry
Welsh Ancestry
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