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(1986) The kaleidoscope of science I, Dordrecht, Springer.
George Gamow burst upon the European community of physicists like a meteor from outer space. The origin of his trajectory was distant Leningrad; his point of impact was Göttingen;. The time was mid-June 1928. The impression Gamow made has been recorded by Léon Rosenfeld. "I shall never forget," Rosenfeld recalled, "the first time he appeared in Göttingen — how could anyone who has ever met Gamow forget his first meeting with him — a Slav giant, fair haired and speaking a very picturesque German; in fact he was picturesque in everything, even in his physics."1 Gamow had learned German from a private tutor as a youth in Odessa with the result, he later recalled, that "I"m terribly poor inder,die,das, and my grammar is horrible, but pronunciation good."2
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-5496-0_14
Full citation:
Stuewer, R. H. (1986)., Gamow's theory of alpha-decay, in E. Ullmann-Margalit (ed.), The kaleidoscope of science I, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 147-186.
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