- Paul
Adrien Maurice Dirac (/dɪˈræk/ dih-RAK; 8
August 1902 – 20
October 1984) was an
English mathematical and
theoretical physicist who is considered...
- In
particle physics, the
Dirac equation is a
relativistic wave
equation derived by
British physicist Paul
Dirac in 1928. In its free form, or including...
- In
mathematical analysis, the
Dirac delta function (or δ distribution), also
known as the unit impulse, is a
generalized function on the real numbers...
- The
Dirac Medal or
Dirac prize can
refer to
different awards named in
honour of the
physics Nobel Laureate Paul
Dirac.
Dirac Medal (ICTP),
awarded by the...
- Look up
Dirac in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Paul
Dirac (1902–1984) was a Swiss-British
theoretical physicist,
Nobel laureate, and a
founder of the...
- ,: 112 the
Dirac constant: 275 : 726 : xv (or
Dirac's constant: 148 : 604 : 313 ), the
Dirac h {\textstyle h} : xviii (or
Dirac's h {\textstyle...
- Fermi–
Dirac may
refer to: Fermi–
Dirac statistics or Fermi–
Dirac distribution Fermi–
Dirac integral (disambiguation)
Complete Fermi–
Dirac integral Incomplete...
- Fermi–
Dirac statistics is a type of
quantum statistics that
applies to the
physics of a
system consisting of many non-interacting,
identical particles...
- \left\{\gamma ^{0},\gamma ^{1},\gamma ^{2},\gamma ^{3}\right\}\ ,} also
called the
Dirac matrices, are a set of
conventional matrices with
specific anticommutation...
- In mathematics, a
Dirac spectrum,
named after Paul
Dirac, is the
spectrum of
eigenvalues of a
Dirac operator on a
Riemannian manifold with a spin structure...