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Irving LangmuirIrving Langmuir was an American chemist and physicist. Born January 31, 1881 in Brooklyn, New York - Died August 16, 1957 in Woods Hole, Massachusetts He graduated with a B.S. from the Columbia University School of Mines in 1903 and did postgraduate work in chemistry under Nobel laureate Walther Nernst in Göttingen and earned his Ph.D. degree in 1906. Langmuir then taught at Stevens Institute of Technology[?] in Hoboken, New Jersey, until 1909, when he began working at the General Electric research laboratory (Schenectady, New York). While at G.E., from 1909-1950, Langmuir advanced several basic fields of physics and chemistry, invented the gas filled incandescent lamp, the hydrogen welding technique, and was awarded the 1932 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his work in surface chemistry. His initial contributions to science came from his study of light bulbs (which was a continuation of his Ph.D. work). First his improvement of vacuum techniques led to the invention of the high-vacuum tube. A year later he discovered that the lifetime of a tungsten filament was greatly lengthened by filling the bulb with an inert gas, such as argon, which is an important part of the modern day incandescent light bulb. As he continued to study filaments in vacuum and different gas environments he began to study the emission of charged particles from hot filaments (thermionic emission). He was one of the first scientists to work with plasmas and was the first to call these ionized gases by that name. He introduced the concept of electron temperature and in 1924 invented the diagnostic method for measuring both temperature and density with a thermionic probe, now called a Langmuir probe and commonly used in plasma physics. The current of a biased probe tip is measured as a function of bias voltage to determine the local plasma temperature and density. He also discovered atomic hydrogen, which he put to use by inventing the atomic hydrogen welding process. Following World War I Langmuir contributed to atomic theory and the understanding of atomic structure by defining the modern concept of valence shells and isotopes. He joined Katherine Blodgett to study thin films and surface adsorption. They introduced the concept of a monolayer (a layer of material one molecule thick) and the two dimensional physics which describes such a surface. In 1932 he received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry "for his discoveries and investigations in surface chemistry." During World War II Langmuir worked to develop protective smoke screens and methods for de-icing aircraft wings. This research led him to discover that the introduction of dry ice and iodide into a sufficiently moist cloud of low temperature could induce precipitation, allowing some degree of weather control. He married Marion Mersereau in 1912. They had a son, Kenneth, and a daughter, Barbara. the theater of war, and had the good fortune to inhabit departments which
them to address their pleasantries to the unfortunate inhabitants of
maintained also that the allied sovereigns and the general officers of
regular troops, and that the atrocities.html">atrocities were committed by undisciplined
on many occasions, especially at Troves, proofs to the contrary. This
Hohenlohe and the Emperor Alexander himself justified the burnings,
very eyes, not only by the Cossacks, but also by regularly enlisted and
their generals to put an end to such atrocities, and nevertheless when
once the hordes of Cossacks who devastated the country.
The field of the La Rothiere was, as I have said, the rendezvous of the
when a child, had foreshadowed in his engagement with the scholars his
the enemy.html">enemy obtained, only at the price of much blood, an advantage which
followed this unequal struggle, the Emperor ordered the retreat from
narrowly escaped an imminent danger. He found himself surrounded by a
junior, his equerry, who followed the Emperor closely, received a ball in
succeeded in extricating his Majesty. I can assert that his Majesty
that day, as I unbuckled his sword-belt, he drew it half out of the
the wind with this? The rascals are too impudent. It is necessary to
respectful distance."
It is not my intention to write the history of this campaign in France,
the highest point the admiration of those who surrounded him.
his own troops, while only creating losses in the enemy's, which they
Alpine eagle with a flock of ravens: "The eagle may kill them by
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