John
Bardeen, William Shockley, Walter Brattain

Computer card containing many IC's each with thousands of
transistors.
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These three scientists shared the 1956 Nobel
Prize for jointly inventing the transistor, a solid state device that could amplify
electric current. The transistor has replaced the vacuum tube in almost all of its
former applications, and with the invention of the integrated circuit many millions of
these transistors can be packed onto a single sliver of silicon. As a staff member of the
University of Minnesota Bardeen also worked for the US Naval Ordinance Laboratory in
Washington, D.C. afterwards he joined Bell Telephone labs, founded by Alexander Graham
Bell. Among Bardeens other achievements was a theory of superconductivity, and a
theory explaining properties of semiconductors. Shockley was born in London. He also
joined Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1936 and began several experiments which led to the
invention of the junction transistor.
Brattain was born in China. In 1929 he also became a researcher for Bell Labs. His
research involved investigations in to the properties of solids, especially atomic
structures. He was granted a number of patents and wrote extensively on solid state
physics. |
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