233:, a small, interdisciplinary program of studies for undergraduates. Since Adler was “regarded as one of his department’s most outstanding teachers of undergraduates” and headed up its undergraduate thesis program, MIT established in his honor the yearly David Adler Memorial Thesis Prize for Outstanding Undergraduate Thesis. This honor has since been reconfigured as the David Adler Memorial Thesis Prize for Outstanding Master's of Engineering in Electrical Engineering Thesis.
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at a time when Prof. Schwinger was revolutionizing theoretical physics. But
Schwinger, who has been criticized for ignoring his graduate students, lost Adler’s thesis draft, and Adler changed his research direction, completing his Ph.D. on the theory of semiconductor-to-metal transitions with
226:(MIT) in 1965, advancing to full professor in the department of electrical engineering and computer science in 1975. During his relatively short career, Adler published almost 300 papers in technical journals and presented over 80 invited papers at scientific meetings throughout the world.
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energy conversion, and threshold switching and memory devices. He was also renowned for the “originality and clarity” of his review articles, which have been described as “among the clearest and best written in any field of science and technology.”
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Adler was also well known in the physics community for his love and knowledge of fine food and world travel. Adler was married to biochemist Alice J. Adler for 29 years, until his death.
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495:& Adler D., “Local Structure, Bonding, and Electronic Properties of Covalent Amorphous Semiconductors,” CONTEMPORARY PHYSICS, Vol. 19, No. 2 (1978), pp. 109–26.
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154:, Adler made significant contributions to the understanding of transition-metal oxides, the electronic properties of low-mobility materials, transport phenomena in
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Adler D., “Mechanisms for Metal-Nonmetal
Transitions in Transition Metal Oxides and Sulfides,” REVIEWS OF MODERN PHYSICS, Vol. 40, No. 4 (1968), p. 714 ff.
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512:, “Valence-Alternation Model for Localized Gap States in Lone-Pair Semiconductors,” PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, Vol. 37, No. 22 (1976), pp. 1504–7.
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489:, “Mechanism of Threshold Switching in Amorphous Alloys,” REVIEWS OF MODERN PHYSICS, Vol. 50, No. 2 (1978), pp. 209–20.
472:, “Structure and Electronic States in Disordered Systems,” PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, Vol. 57, No. 4 (1986), pp. 467–70.
502:, “Electronic Structure of Amorphous Semiconductors,” PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, Vol. 36, No. 20 (1976), pp. 1197–1200.
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See, e.g., Abraham Klein, “Recollections of Julian
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222:(AERE) in Harwell, United Kingdom. He then became a research associate at the
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The Man Who Saw
Tomorrow: The Life and Inventions of Stanford R. Ovshinsky
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Adler was born in the Bronx to
Russian immigrant parents and attended the
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Adler played a key role in the development and operation of MIT’s
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materials, metal-insulator transitions, and electronic defects in
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146:(April 13, 1935 – March 31, 1987) was an American physicist and
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Massachusetts
Institute of Technology School of Science faculty
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David Adler
Lectureship Award in the Field of Materials Physics
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Next, Adler worked for a year as a research associate at the
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Julian
Schwinger: The Physicist, the Teacher, and the Man
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For Adler’s relatively non-technical discussion, see his
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See, e.g., Hoddeson & Garrett, pp. 156, 327 n.22.
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in 1964. At
Harvard, Adler started a dissertation on
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Harvard
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
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198:(RPI) in 1956 and his doctorate in physics from
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475:U.S. Patent No. 4,379,943 (Apr. 12, 1983).
452:Marvin Silver, “David Adler (1935-1987),”
329:Marvin Silver, “David Adler (1935-1987),”
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19:For other people named David Adler, see
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561:Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute alumni
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148:Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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120:Atomic Energy Research Establishment
16:American physicist and MIT professor
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276:“Amorphous-Semiconductor Devices,”
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454:Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids
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541:American theoretical physicists
254:Semiconductors & Insulators
180:Energy Conversion Devices, Inc.
478:Adler D., Shur M., Silver M.,
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428:(MIT), Apr.3, 1987, p. 1
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468:Baryam Y., Adler D., &
250:Materials Research Bulletin
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463:Selected publications
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320:(Feb. 1988), p. 106.
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278:Scientific American
508:, Adler D., &
433:2021-11-02 at the
416:2016-01-26 at the
200:Harvard University
184:solar photovoltaic
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399:N.Y. Times
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364:Tech Talk
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