Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck
0 sources
Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck
Summary
Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck is a human[1]. He worked as a physicist[2].
Key Facts
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's professions included physicist[2].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's education included a stint at University of Notre Dame[3].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's doctoral advisor was Eugene Guth[4].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck is recorded as male[5].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's instance of is recorded as human[6].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck supervised Robert Arns as a doctoral student[7].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck supervised Leon Madansky as a doctoral student[8].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's ISNI is recorded as 0000000029043486[9].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 45768060[10].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n85800552[11].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 216583[12].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's family name is recorded as Wiedenbeck[13].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's given name is recorded as Marcellus[14].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's given name is recorded as Lee[15].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's Academic Tree ID is recorded as 34753[16].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's SHARE Catalogue author ID is recorded as 50643[17].
- Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's WorldCat Entities ID is recorded as E39PCjBYxkTC7F4jqCB7kpHXBP[18].
Body
Education
Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's education included a stint at University of Notre Dame[3]. His doctoral advisor was Eugene Guth[4].
Career and Affiliations
Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck's professions included physicist[2]. Doctoral students include Robert Arns[7], a physicist[19], 1933–2019[20], of United States[21] and Leon Madansky[8], a nuclear physicist[22], 1923–2000[23], of United States[24], awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship[25].
FAQs
What did Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck do for work?
Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck worked as physicist[2].
Where did Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck go to school?
Marcellus Lee Wiedenbeck was educated at University of Notre Dame[3].