Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Timeline of states of matter and phase transitions
Timeline of states of matter and phase transitions
- 1895 - Pierre Curie discovers that induced magnetization is proportional to magnetic field strength
- 1911 - Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovers superconductivity
- 1912 - Peter Debye derives the T-cubed law for the low temperature heat capacity of a nonmetallic solid
- 1925 - Ernst Ising presents the solution to the one-dimensional Ising model and models ferromagnetism as a cooperative spin phenomenon
- 1929 - Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac and Werner Karl Heisenberg develop the quantum theory of ferromagnetism
- 1932 - Louis Eugène Félix Neel discovers antiferromagnetism
- 1933 - Walter Meissner and R. Ochsenfeld discover perfect superconducting diamagnetism
- 1933-1937 - Lev Davidovich Landau develops the Landau theory of phase transitions
- 1937 - Petr Leonidovich Kapitza and John Frank Allen discover superfluidity
- 1941 - Lev Davidovich Landau explains superfluidity
- 1942 - Hannes Alfven predicts magnetohydrodynamic waves in plasmas
- 1944 - Lars Onsager publishes the exact solution to the two-dimensional Ising model
- 1957 - John Bardeen, Leon Cooper, and Robert Schrieffer develop the BCS theory of superconductivity
- end of the 50th - Lev Davidovich Landau develops the theory of Fermi liquid
- 1959 - Philip Warren Anderson predicts localization in disordered systems
- 1972 - Douglas Osheroff, Robert Richardson , and David Lee discover that helium-3 can become a superfluid
- 1974 - Kenneth Wilson develops the renormalization group technique for treating phase transitions
- 1980 - Klaus von Klitzing discovers the quantum Hall effect
- 1982 - Horst L. Stoermer and Daniel C. Tsui discover the fractional quantum Hall effect
- 1983 - Robert B. Laughlin explains the fractional quantum Hall effect
- 1987 - Karl Alexander Müller and Georg Bednorz discover high critical temperature ceramic superconductors
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


