Joseph H. Hamilton

Joseph H. Hamilton (born 1932, Ferriday, Louisiana) is an American nuclear physicist and professor at Vanderbilt University.

His research has established that the nuclei of atoms may have multiple possible co-existing states. He was one of the discoverers of element 117, tennessine, which was named after the state of Tennessee because of his contribution.[1]

He founded the University Isotope Separator at Oak Ridge (UNISOR), a consortium of twelve universities, in 1971. In 1981, he founded the Joint Institute for Heavy Ion Research (JIHIR) in Oak Ridge.[2]

Education

He received his bachelor's degree from Mississippi College, his master's and doctoral degrees from Indiana University, and honorary doctorates from Mississippi College and the Goethe Universitât Frankfurt.[3]

gollark: It could probably have gone another way, if the history of computing had gone somewhat differently.
gollark: Well, LXDE and most DEs and stuff *have* it, because icons are nice for some people.
gollark: Or, well, within a second or so.
gollark: It's also nice to be able to just type a command and get a program open immediately.
gollark: In GNU/Linux system management is typically done by terminals.

References

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