What did Dennis Gabor blue plaque do at 79 Queen’s Gate?

79 Queen’s GateBlue Plaque

The Story

# Dennis Gabor at 79 Queen's Gate Standing before this elegant Victorian townhouse in the heart of Kensington, you're looking at the London residence where Dennis Gabor spent crucial years developing the theoretical foundations that would revolutionize the way we see the world. It was within these walls during the 1940s and 1950s that the Hungarian-born physicist refined his groundbreaking concept of holography—a technique for capturing three-dimensional images using coherent light—work that would eventually earn him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1971. Though Gabor conducted much of his practical experimentation at the Thomson Research Laboratory in Rugby, it was here at Queen's Gate where he contemplated the deep physics, sketched his revolutionary ideas, and corresponded with fellow scientists about a technology that seemed almost like science fiction at the time. This address represents more than just a home; it's where one of the twentieth century's most transformative inventions took shape in the mind of a man who understood that the future of imaging lay not in what we could see, but in what we could capture and replay in full three dimensions—a vision born in this very building.

Location

79 Queen’s Gate, SW7 Kensington & Chelsea

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