Robert Hofstadter Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

Robert Hofstadter Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

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This Biography is about one of the best Physicist Robert Hofstadter including his Height, weight,Age & Other Detail…

Biography Of Robert Hofstadter
Real Name Robert Hofstadter
Profession Physicists, Astrophysicists
Famous as Physicist
Nationality American
Personal Life of Robert Hofstadter
Born on 05 February 1915
Birthday 5th February
Died At Age 75
Sun Sign Aquarius
Born in New York City
Died on 17 November 1990
Place of death Stanford
Family Background of Robert Hofstadter
Father Louis Hofstadter
Mother Henrietta Koenigsberg
Spouse/Partner Nancy Givan
Children Douglas Hofstadter, Molly Hofstadter, Laura Hofstadter
Education 1938 – Princeton University, 1935 – City College of New York, 1938 – Princeton University, 1939 – University of Pennsylvania
Awards 1961 – Nobel Prize in Physics 1958 – Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences US & Canada

1987 – Dirac Medal for the Advancement of Theoretical Physics 1986 – National Medal of Science for Physical Science

Personal Fact of Robert Hofstadter

Robert Hofstadter was an American physicist famous for his discoveries concerning the structure of nucleons. His in-depth investigation of electron scattering in atomic nuclei led to the determination of the size and shape of the proton and the neutron, and earned him a share of the 1961 Nobel Prize in Physics which he was jointly awarded with Rudolf Mssbauer.

Born into a Jewish family in New York, he grew up to be a brilliant student who excelled in the sciences and mathematics. He graduated magna cum laude from the City College of New York and was awarded a Charles A. Coffin Foundation Fellowship to attend graduate school at Princeton University. Armed with a doctorate degree by the time he was 23, he served as a physicist at the National Bureau of Standards during World War II before embarking on an academic career.

He worked for a while at the Princeton University where he carried out research on crystal conduction counters, on the Compton effect. After leaving Princeton, he moved to Stanford University where he focused his efforts on electron-scattering measurements. In the later stages of his career he grew interested in astrophysics and played a major role in the development of the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory.