Also known as Edward Purcell, Ed Purcell
American physicist (1912-1997)
Edward Mills Purcell was an American physicist who lived from 1912 to 1997 and made important contributions to the field of physics. His work has had lasting significance in scientific research, though the specific details of his achievements would require additional sources to fully explain.
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5 total works indexed
· 2007 · cited 30,796x
· 1953 · cited 29,722x
· 2000 · cited 27,650x
· 1938 · cited 24,321x
Horn antenna used by Harold I. Ewen and Edward M. Purcell in the Lyman Laboratory of Physics at Harvard University in 1951 for the first detection of radio radiation from nuclear atomic hydrogen gas in the Milky Way at a wavelength of 21 cm. Now at National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
Edward Mills Purcell (August 30, 1912 – March 7, 1997) was an American physicist who shared the 1952 Nobel Prize in Physics with Felix Bloch for his independent discovery (published 1946) of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) in liquids and in solids. NMR has become widely used to study the molecular structure of pure materials and the composition of mixtures. Friends and colleagues knew him as Ed Purcell.
· 2000 · cited 23,715x
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).