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de Broglie

[ duh broh-glee, broh-glee, broi; French duh braw-glee ]

noun

  1. Louis Vic·tor [lwee veek-, tawr]. 1892–1987, French physicist: Nobel Prize 1929.


de Broglie

/ də brɔj /

noun

  1. de BroglieLouis Victor18921987MFrenchSCIENCE: physicist Prince Louis Victor (lwi viktɔr). 1892–1987, French physicist, noted for his research in quantum mechanics and his development of wave mechanics: Nobel prize for physics 1929
  2. BroglieMaurice18751960MFrenchSCIENCE: physicist his brother, Maurice (mɔris), Duc de Broglie. 1875–1960, French physicist, noted for his research into X-ray spectra
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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The effect is of a droplet that appears to walk along a rippled surface in patterns that turn out to be in line with de Broglie's pilot wave theory.

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One of those is Alexia de Broglie, who created a personal finance education app called Your Juno, for women and non-binary people, after being shocked by how little her female friends understood about finance.

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Ingres seems to have poured his whole soul into de Broglie’s satin dress, the color of which matches her eyes.

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Indeed, the original PhD thesis of Louis de Broglie, which established the wave-particle duality in quantum mechanics, was short and simple and earned him the Nobel Prize just five years later.

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Then, in 1923, Louis-Victor-Pierre-Raymond de Broglie came up with the amazing concept that Einstein’s wave–particle duality actually applied to all quantum particles, in particular electrons.

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