Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

László Tisza

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Name
  
Laszlo Tisza


Role
  
Physicist

Laszlo Tisza newsmitedusitesmitedunewsofficefilesimages

Born
  
July 7, 1907
Austro-Hungarian Empire, Budapest

Occupation
  
Physicist and professor

Died
  
April 15, 2009, Newton, Massachusetts, United States

Books
  
Generalized thermodynamics, On the General Theory of Phase Transitions

Education
  
Budapest University of Technology and Economics (1932), University of Gottingen

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

PALETTA – A Terror Háza Múzeumban mutatták be Tőkéczki László Tisza Istvánról írt könyvét


László Tisza (July 7, 1907 – April 15, 2009) was Professor of Physics Emeritus at MIT. He was a colleague of famed physicists Edward Teller, Lev Landau and Fritz London, and initiated the two-fluid theory of liquid helium.

Contents

United States

In 1941, Tisza immigrated to the United States and joined the faculty at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His research areas included theoretical physics and the history and philosophy of science, specifically on the foundation of thermodynamics and quantum mechanics. He taught at MIT until 1973.

Publications

Tisza was the author of the 1966 book, Generalized Thermodynamics. The 1982 publication, Physics as Natural Philosophy: Essays in Honor of László Tisza, was written by Tisza's colleagues and former students in honor of his 75th birthday.

Affiliations

He was a Fellow of The American Physical Society and American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow and had been a visiting professor at the University of Paris in Sorbonne.

References

László Tisza Wikipedia