简体版 繁體版 English 한국어
登録 ログイン

ibm zurich research laboratoryの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • In 1968, he moved to IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in R黶chlikon.
  • From 1956 to 1966 he was the director of IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in R黶chlikon.
  • During this period he spent a year at the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory ( 1991 1992 ).
  • In 1972, his teachers Wolfgang Hoffmann and Horst B鰄m arranged for him to spend the summer at the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory as a visiting student.
  • Ungerboeck received an electrical engineering degree ( with emphasis on telecommunications ) from Vienna University of Technology in 1964, and a Ph . D . from the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in 1967.
  • The scanning tunneling microscope, an instrument for imaging surfaces at the atomic level, was developed in 1981 by Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, for which they were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986.
  • The scanning tunneling microscope, invented in 1981 by Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer of the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in Switzerland, uses as its " lens " an exceedingly thin wire tip whose end is the width of a single atom.
  • From about 2005, he collaborated with the scanning tunneling microscopy groups of IBM Almaden Research Center and IBM Zurich Research Laboratory and from about 2010 with National Institute of Standards and Technology to help to establish combined scanning tunneling microscopy and atomic force microscopy at ultralow temperatures.
  • First, the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope in 1981 which provided unprecedented visualization of individual atoms and bonds, and was successfully used to manipulate individual atoms in 1989 . The microscope's developers Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory received a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986.
  • From 1987 to 1989, he was a visiting scientist at the IBM Thomas J . Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, NY . From 1989 to 1996, he was a Research Staff Member at the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, where he was manager of the New Materials and Heterostructures research group.
  • The invention, announced last week by the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in Switzerland, is not likely to replace conventional electronic computing systems any time soon; Dr . James M . Gimzewski, a member of the group that built the molecular abacus, described its ungainly operation as comparable to using the Eiffel Tower to move around the beads of an ordinary abacus.