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  1. Louis de Broglie belonged to the famous aristocratic family of Broglie, whose representatives for several centuries occupied important military and political posts in France.

  2. Aug 11, 2024 · Louis de Broglie, French physicist best known for his research on quantum theory and for predicting the wave nature of electrons. He was awarded the 1929 Nobel Prize for Physics. Learn more about de Broglie’s life, career, and accomplishments in this article.

  3. Elected a member of the Academy of Sciences of the French Institute in 1933, Louis de Broglie has been its Permanent Secretary for the mathematical sciences since 1942. He has been a member of the Bureau des Longitudes since 1944. He holds the Grand Cross of the Légion d’Honneur and is an Officer of the Order of Leopold of Belgium.

  4. Facts. Photo from the Nobel Foundation archive. Prince Louis-Victor Pierre Raymond de Broglie. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1929. Born: 15 August 1892, Dieppe, France. Died: 19 March 1987, Paris, France. Affiliation at the time of the award: Sorbonne University, Institut Henri Poincaré, Paris, France.

  5. This phenomenon can be explained simply by assuming that the radiation is com-posed of quanta hv capable of yielding all their energy to an electron of the 246 1929 L.DE BROGLIE.

  6. Louis de Broglie (In full:Louis-Victor-Pierre-Raymond, 7th duc de Broglie) was an eminent French physicist. He gained worldwide acclaim for his groundbreaking work on quantum theory. In his 1924 thesis, he discovered the wave nature of electrons and suggested that all matter have wave properties.

  7. Feb 12, 2024 · Louis de Broglie was a groundbreaking French physicist whose revolutionary ideas about the wave-particle duality of matter fundamentally transformed the field of quantum mechanics.

  8. Dec 1, 2015 · Louis de Broglie, 1929. Louis de Broglie was a French physicist who made invaluable contributions to the field of quantum mechanics through his research on the wave theory of matter. Compiled by William Mitchell (wmitchell30)

  9. Louis-Victor, duke de Broglie, (born Aug. 15, 1892, Dieppe, France—died March 19, 1987, Paris), French physicist. A descendant of the de Broglie family of diplomats and politicians, he was inspired to study atomic physics by the work of Max Planck and Albert Einstein.

  10. Louis de Broglie, 1948. The defining feature of the microscopic world is the wave-particle duality. Whenever we observe elementary entities (like electrons or photons) they appear as a localized events. A single photon can be observed as a tiny dot on a photographic plate. A single electron can be observed as a tiny flash on a television screen.