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DEC 5, 2021 - 0 COMMENTS
It is not surprising that there are many engineers whose first passion is physics
(or mathematics). However, under unavoidable circumstances, they end up
doing engineering instead. For example: did you know that Paul Dirac's father
wanted him to become an electrical engineer?
After graduating, Dirac was without job. He decided to shift his attention to his
first love-physics and the rest is history. Today we know Dirac as one of the
founders of quantum mechanics. So, even if you might be clueless in life right
now, your passion will find you in the end.
John Bardeen
Bardeen is the only person in history to have won two Nobel Prizes in physics.
He received his bachelor and master degrees in electrical engineering in 1928
and 1929 respectively from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
At first, John was employed by Gulf Oil corporation where he worked for four
years. But he switched career by enrolling at Princeton University in 1933 to
obtain a degree in mathematical physics. John went on to win Nobel Prizes in
1956 and 1972.
Henri Becquerel
Henri Becquerel was born into a family which produced four generations of
physicists. He specialized in civil engineering at one of the most prestigious
institutions in France. Becquerel was appointed as chief engineer at the
Department of Bridges and Highways in 1894.
Around the same time he was investigating the properties of chemical
elements. In 1896, he stumbled upon a new phenomenon that was named
radioactivity by Madame Curie. The 1903 Nobel Prize in physics was awarded
to Becquerel and the Curies.
Wilhelm Röntgen
Röntgen was a student of mechanical engineering at ETH Zurich. He was a
contemporary of Becquerel... in fact, their ground-breaking discoveries were
apart by only a few months. In 1895, Wilhelm produced very high energy waves
called the x-rays, an achievement that earned him the inaugural Nobel Prize in
1901.
Eugene Wigner
Eugene Wigner was a Hungarian-American theoretical physicist who won the
Nobel Prize in physics in 1963 for contributions he made to nuclear physics,
including the formulation of the law of conservation of parity.
Paul Dirac
As mentioned before, Dirac studied electrical engineering at the University of
Bristol. He graduated in 1921 but despite having a first class honors in
engineering, he was unable to find work as an engineer in the post-war Britain.
Dirac again enrolled for a bachelor degree, this time in mathematics at the
University of Bristol. He was allowed to skip a year as well as study free of
charge because he was an exceptional student during his engineering years.
In 1923, Dirac once again graduated with a first class honors. Many years later,
he became part of the quantum revolution that engulfed European scientists.
Dirac also predicted the antimatter which was discovered within few years by
Carl Anderson in America.
Dennis Gabor
Dennis Gabor was a Hungarian-British electrical engineer and physicist who
won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1971 for the invention of Holography, a
technique he created in 1948 to create photographic recording of a light field.
Jack Kilby
Kilby was an American electrical engineer who was one of the inventors of the
integrated circuit, for which he won the Nobel Prize in 2000. Jack also invented
hand-held calculator and thermal printer. He had completed bachelor and
master degrees in engineering in 1947 and 1950 respectively.
Shuji Nakamura
Nakamura was a Japanese-American electronics engineer who holds over 100
patents. He won the Nobel Prize in 2014 for the creation of blue laser diodes in
the early 1990s that were later on used in the HD-DVD and blue-ray
technologies.
Shuji Nakamura obtained his bachelor and master degrees in electronics
engineering from the University of Tokushima in 1977 and 1979 respectively.
Nakamura was also awarded a D.Eng. degree from the University of Tokushima
in 1994.
Ivar Giaever
Ivar Giaever is a Norwegian-American engineer who shared the 1973 Nobel
Prize in physics with Esaki and Josephson for their discoveries regarding
electron tunneling. Giaever had earned a bachelor degree in mechanical
engineering from the Norwegian Institute of Technology in 1952.
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