(Redirected from Daniel Chee Tsui)'Daniel Chee Tsui' (, born
February 28,
1939,
Henan Province,
China) is a
Chinese American physicist whose areas of research included electrical properties of thin films and
microstructures of semiconductors and
solid-state physics. In
1998, along with
Horst L. Störmer of
Columbia University and
Robert Laughlin of
Stanford, Daniel Tsui was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to the discovery of the fractional
quantum Hall effect by the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Daniel Tsui attended
Pui Ching Middle School,
Kowloon,
Hong Kong. He moved to the
United States in
1958 to attend
Augustana College in
Rock Island, Illinois, and graduated
Phi Beta Kappa. He received his doctorate in physics from the
University of Chicago in 1968 and immediately took a job at
Bell Labs where he was a pioneer in in the study of two-dimensional electrons. His discovery of the the fractional quantum Hall effect, the work for which he was awarded the Nobel prize, occurred shortly before he was appointed a professor of Electrical Engineering at
Princeton in
1982.
External links
★
Nobel Prize in Physics 1998
★
Nobel autobiography
★
discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations.