Chinese Physicist
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Nobel Prize Winner, Chinese Physicist Chen-Ning Yang, Dies At 103
- Saturday October 18, 2025
- World News | Press Trust of India
Chen Ning Yang was born in Hefei, east China's Anhui Province, in 1922. In the 1940s, he went to the United States to pursue academic studies and subsequently held teaching positions. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957.
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www.ndtv.com
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Chinese Scientists Seek To Redefine Second With New Ultra-Precise Clock
- Tuesday January 30, 2024
- Science | Edited by Amit Chaturvedi
The current record holder is the optical clock hosted by the University of Colorado in Boulder. It was developed by a group led by Chinese-American physicist Jun Ye.
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www.ndtv.com
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Beaten by Chinese security agents who wanted his Twitter password
- Tuesday February 14, 2012
- World News | Andrew Jacobs, The New York Times
The Chinese Communist Party has long felt threatened by overseas Web sites and social media outlets, but the recent detention of a California physicist who says he was beaten by Chinese security agents seeking the password for his Twitter account suggests how far the government will go in its battle against a freewheeling Internet available only be...
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www.ndtv.com
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Nobel Prize Winner, Chinese Physicist Chen-Ning Yang, Dies At 103
- Saturday October 18, 2025
- World News | Press Trust of India
Chen Ning Yang was born in Hefei, east China's Anhui Province, in 1922. In the 1940s, he went to the United States to pursue academic studies and subsequently held teaching positions. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957.
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www.ndtv.com
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Chinese Scientists Seek To Redefine Second With New Ultra-Precise Clock
- Tuesday January 30, 2024
- Science | Edited by Amit Chaturvedi
The current record holder is the optical clock hosted by the University of Colorado in Boulder. It was developed by a group led by Chinese-American physicist Jun Ye.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Beaten by Chinese security agents who wanted his Twitter password
- Tuesday February 14, 2012
- World News | Andrew Jacobs, The New York Times
The Chinese Communist Party has long felt threatened by overseas Web sites and social media outlets, but the recent detention of a California physicist who says he was beaten by Chinese security agents seeking the password for his Twitter account suggests how far the government will go in its battle against a freewheeling Internet available only be...
-
www.ndtv.com