Richard Phillips Feynman Biography
Richard Phillips Feynman (English: Richard Phillips Feynman, May 11, 1918-February 15, 1988), American Jewish physicist, professor of physics at California Institute of Technology, Nobel in 1965 Winner of the Physics Award.
Richard Feynman, after graduating from high school, entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to study mathematics and electrical engineering, and then transferred to physics. He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with honors in 1939, and received a doctorate degree in theoretical physics from Princeton University in June 1942. In the same year he married Irene, a lover he met in high school. In 1942, 24-year-old Feynman joined the American Atomic Bomb Research Project Team to participate in the secret development of the atomic bomb project "Manhattan Project." Irene died in 1945. The "Manhattan Project" ended and Feynman taught at Cornell University. He went to California Institute of Technology in 1950 as a professor of Tolman physics until his death.
