Igal Talmi

Talmi spent sabbatical years at Princeton, Stanford, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Yale and other universities as a visiting professor.[4] In addition to his influential papers and conference talks, Talmi also wrote two books that served as guides and companions to generations of nuclear structure theorists.[5] The atomic nucleus can be composed of a large number of protons and neutrons which move due to strong interactions between them.This picture of the nucleus is called the nuclear shell model[6] to obtain the information from experimental data and use it to calculate and predict energies which have not been measured.[8] Talmi also participated in the study of explicit fermion–boson mappings required to connect the interacting-boson model with its shell-model roots and in the introduction of the boson F-spin analog to nucleon isospin.
Hebrew UniversityETH ZurichNuclear shell modelNuclear physicsWeizmann Institute of ScienceDoctoral advisorWolfgang PauliHebrewnuclear physicistUkraineSoviet UnionMandate PalestineKfar YehezkelGymnasia HerzliyaTel AvivPalmachHebrew University of JerusalemGiulio RacahPrinceton UniversityEugene WignerUzi DayanPrincetonStanfordMassachusetts Institute of Technologyvisiting professorIsrael Academy of Sciences and HumanitiesAmos de-Shalitnuclear structureatomic nucleusprotonsneutronspotential wellmagic numbersshell modelinteracting boson modelsIsrael PrizeFellow of the American Physical SocietyHans Bethe PrizeAmerican Physical SocietyEMET PrizeList of Israel Prize recipientsBibcodeSpringer-VerlagReviews of Modern PhysicsHans A. Bethe PrizeJohn Norris BahcallEdwin Ernest SalpeterGerald E. BrownGordon BaymMichael C. F. WiescherWick HaxtonStan WoosleyAlastair G. W. CameronJames R. WilsonFriedrich K. ThielemannDavid ArnettClaus RolfsChristopher J. PethickManuel PeimbertSilvia Torres-PeimbertGeorge M. FullerKarl Ludwig KratzJames LattimerVassiliki KalogeraStuart L. ShapiroKeith Alison OliveKen'ichi NomotoFiona HarrisonJames W. TruranMadappa Prakash