- Gerd
Binnig (German pronunciation: [ˈɡɛʁt ˈbɪnɪç] ; born 20 July 1947) is a
German physicist. He is most
famous for
having won the
Nobel Prize in Physics...
- at the
atomic level. Its
development in 1981
earned its inventors, Gerd
Binnig and
Heinrich Rohrer, then at IBM Zürich, the
Nobel Prize in
Physics in 1986...
- microscope's
developers Gerd
Binnig and
Heinrich Rohrer at IBM
Zurich Research Laboratory received a
Nobel Prize in
Physics in 1986.
Binnig,
Quate and
Gerber also...
- the co-inventor of the
atomic force microscope (AFM),
together with Gerd
Binnig and
Calvin Quate. He was a
founding member and
director for
scientific communication...
- in
Physics for
their works on
quantum tunneling in solids. In 1981, Gerd
Binnig and
Heinrich Rohrer developed a new type of microscope,
called scanning...
- plot.
Although the
initial publication about atomic force microscopy by
Binnig,
Quate and
Gerber in 1986
speculated about the
possibility of achieving...
- IBM and the
Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (ETH)
Zurich opened the
Binnig and
Rohrer Nanotechnology Center,
which is
located on the same
campus in...
-
Abraham Goudsmit: a
Biographical Memoir (PDF).
National Academy of Sciences.
Binnig, G.; Rohrer, H.; Gerber, Ch.; Weibel, E. (1982-07-05). "Surface Studies...
- instruments, and in 1986 with Gerd
Binnig, Quate, and Gerber's
invention of the
atomic force microscope, then
Binnig's and Rohrer's
Nobel Prize in Physics...
-
first successful scanning tunneling microscope experiment was done by Gerd
Binnig and
Heinrich Rohrer. The key to
their success was
using a
feedback loop...