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William Carl Lineberger (born December 5, 1939) is an American chemist. A native of Hamlet, North Carolina, William Carl Lineberger was born to parents Caleb Henry and Evelyn Pelot Cooper Lineberger on December 5, 1939. His mother was a former teacher and his father was a railroad worker. Through his mother, Lineberger is of French Huguenot descent. As a child, Lineberger was a Boy Scout and made Eagle rank. After completing his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Lineberger began teaching at his alma mater, leaving for a research position at the U. S. Army Ballistic Research Laboratory and later the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics. The University of Colorado at Boulder, one of two joint operators of JILA, hired Lineberger as an ass

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  • William Carl Lineberger (* 5. Dezember 1939 in ) ist ein US-amerikanischer Physikochemiker. Lineberger studierte am Georgia Institute of Technology mit dem Bachelor-Abschluss in Elektrotechnik 1961, dem Master-Abschluss 1963 und der Promotion 1965 mit dem Thema The ionization of lithium ions by electron impact. Danach war er dort Assistant Professor für Elektrotechnik. 1965 wurde er Forschungsphysiker in atmosphärischer Physik am Aberdeen Proving Ground der US Army und ab 1968 war er am Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA), wo er 1970 Assistant Professor und später Professor wurde. Er ist seit 1985 E. U. Condon Distinguished Professor an der University of Colorado at Boulder und Fellow des JILA. Er entwickelte die Photoelektronen-Spektroskopie mit negativen Ionen (Anion Photoelectron Spectroscopy). Er befasst sich mit Struktur und Stabilität von Ionen und freien Radikalen und Fotophysik und Dynamik von Ionenclustern. Er verwendet Laserspektroskopie mit ultrakurzen Pulsen. 2004 erhielt er den Peter Debye Award und 1996 den Irving Langmuir Award. 2015 erhielt er den NAS Award in Chemical Sciences. 1988 erhielt er den Meggers Prize der Optical Society of America, 1993 hielt er die Pimentel Lecture in Berkeley, 1992 die Kistiakowsky Lecture in Harvard und 1990 die Davidson Lecture an der University of Kansas. 1981 erhielt er den Herbert-P.-Broida-Preis der APS und 1992 den Earle K. Plyler Prize. Er war unter anderem Gastprofessor in Stanford, Chicago, an der University of California, Irvine, der University of Florida und der University of Rochester. Er ist Mitglied der American Association for the Advancement of Science, der American Academy of Arts and Sciences, der National Academy of Sciences sowie Fellow der American Physical Society. 1972 erhielt er ein Forschungsstipendium der Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (Sloan Research Fellowship). 1981/82 war er Guggenheim Fellow. (de)
  • William Carl Lineberger (born December 5, 1939) is an American chemist. A native of Hamlet, North Carolina, William Carl Lineberger was born to parents Caleb Henry and Evelyn Pelot Cooper Lineberger on December 5, 1939. His mother was a former teacher and his father was a railroad worker. Through his mother, Lineberger is of French Huguenot descent. As a child, Lineberger was a Boy Scout and made Eagle rank. After completing his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Lineberger began teaching at his alma mater, leaving for a research position at the U. S. Army Ballistic Research Laboratory and later the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics. The University of Colorado at Boulder, one of two joint operators of JILA, hired Lineberger as an assistant professor in 1970. He was named E. U. Condon Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at the University of Colorado in 1985. Over the course of his career, Lineberger has received several awards. Among them are: the Herbert P. Broida Prize (1981) awarded by the American Physical Society, the Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy (1992), Irving Langmuir Award (1996) and Peter Debye Award (2004) of the American Chemical Society, and the William F. Meggers Award in Spectroscopy (1989) from the Optical Society of America. Lineberger received the NAS Award in Chemical Sciences in 2015. Linberger is a member of the American Chemical Society as well as the National Academy of Sciences (1983) and American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1995). He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Physical Society (1973). From 2011 to 2016, Lineberger served on the National Science Board and was nominated for a second term by Barack Obama in 2016. (en)
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  • William Carl Lineberger (* 5. Dezember 1939 in ) ist ein US-amerikanischer Physikochemiker. Lineberger studierte am Georgia Institute of Technology mit dem Bachelor-Abschluss in Elektrotechnik 1961, dem Master-Abschluss 1963 und der Promotion 1965 mit dem Thema The ionization of lithium ions by electron impact. Danach war er dort Assistant Professor für Elektrotechnik. 1965 wurde er Forschungsphysiker in atmosphärischer Physik am Aberdeen Proving Ground der US Army und ab 1968 war er am Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA), wo er 1970 Assistant Professor und später Professor wurde. Er ist seit 1985 E. U. Condon Distinguished Professor an der University of Colorado at Boulder und Fellow des JILA. (de)
  • William Carl Lineberger (born December 5, 1939) is an American chemist. A native of Hamlet, North Carolina, William Carl Lineberger was born to parents Caleb Henry and Evelyn Pelot Cooper Lineberger on December 5, 1939. His mother was a former teacher and his father was a railroad worker. Through his mother, Lineberger is of French Huguenot descent. As a child, Lineberger was a Boy Scout and made Eagle rank. After completing his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Lineberger began teaching at his alma mater, leaving for a research position at the U. S. Army Ballistic Research Laboratory and later the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics. The University of Colorado at Boulder, one of two joint operators of JILA, hired Lineberger as an ass (en)
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  • Carl Lineberger (de)
  • William Carl Lineberger (en)
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