Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr. (July 12, 1913 – May 15, 2008) was an American physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1955 "for his discoveries concerning the fine structure of the hydrogen spectrum." The Nobel Committee that year awarded half the prize to Lamb and the other half to Polykarp Kusch, who won "for his precision determination of the magnetic moment of the electron." Lamb was able to determine precisely a surprising shift in electron energies in a hydrogen atom (see Lamb shift). Lamb was a professor at the University of Arizona College of Optical Sciences.
Lamb was born in Los Angeles, California, United States and attended Los Angeles High School. First admitted in 1930, he received a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1934. For theoretical work on scattering of neutrons by a crystal, guided by J. Robert Oppenheimer, he received the Ph.D. in physics in 1938. Because of limited computational methods available at the time, this research narrowly missed revealing the Mössbauer Effect, 19 years before its recognition by Mössbauer. He worked on nuclear theory, laser physics, and verifying quantum mechanics.
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and the rules they might mold me
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and my crime forgotten
and by now you think i could leave
and all i know is part of the show
the show is all there is to me
and all i am is where i stand
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see the cells i live in
make the shell iç£e been given
painted red these skin colored walls
well the bars they held me
and the scars my trophies
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and all i know is part of the show
the show is all there is to me
and all i am is where i stand
youç£e just too far ,too far to see
your blue skies grey around here
winter burns, stones wonç£ turn cycle frozen
your day is night around here
and still i yearn for the day
when i learn thereç£ a way
out of here
and all i know is part of the show
the show is all there is to me
and all i am is where i stand