Maurice Goldhaber

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Born(1911-04-18)April 18, 1911
DiedMay 11, 2011(2011-05-11) (aged 100)
Maurice Goldhaber
Goldhaber in 1958
Born(1911-04-18)April 18, 1911
DiedMay 11, 2011(2011-05-11) (aged 100)
Alma materUniversity of Berlin
Cambridge University
Known forGoldhaber experiment [fr]
AwardsTom W. Bonner Prize in Nuclear Physics (1971)
National Medal of Science (1983)
Wolf Prize in Physics (1991)
J. Robert Oppenheimer Memorial Prize (1982)
Fermi Award (1998)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsCavendish Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory
Doctoral advisorJames Chadwick
Doctoral studentsTheodore A. Welton[1]

Maurice Goldhaber (April 18, 1911 May 11, 2011) was an American physicist.

He was born on April 18, 1911, in Lemberg, Austria, now called Lviv, Ukraine to a Jewish family. His great-grandfather Gershon Goldhaber was a rabbi.[2]

After beginning his physics studies at the University of Berlin, he earned his doctorate at Magdalene College, Cambridge in 1936.

Career

In 1934, working at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, England he and James Chadwick, through what they called the nuclear photo-electric effect, established that the neutron has a great enough mass over the proton to decay.

He moved to the University of Illinois in 1938. In the 1940s with his wife Gertrude Scharff-Goldhaber he established that beta particles are identical to electrons.

He joined Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1950. With Edward Teller he proposed that the so-called "giant-dipole nuclear resonance" was due to the neutrons in a nucleus vibrating as a group against the protons as a group (Goldhaber–Teller model).

He made a well-known bet with Hartland Snyder in about 1955 that anti-protons could not exist; when he lost the bet, he speculated that the reason anti-matter does not appear to be abundant in the universe is that before the Big Bang, a single particle, the "universon" existed that then decayed into "cosmon" and "anti-cosmon," and that the cosmon subsequently decayed to produce the known cosmos. In the 1950s also he speculated that all fermions[3] such as electrons, protons and neutrons are "doubled," that is that each is associated with a similar heavier particle. He also speculated that in what became known as the Goldhaber–Christie model, the so-called strange particles were composites of just 3 basic particles.

Maurice Goldhaber (left) and Ernest Courant in 2000 in front of the C-shaped Cosmotron magnet that sits outside Building 911, home to Brookhaven Lab's Collider-Accelerator Department.

The 1957 Goldhaber experiment [fr] (with Lee Grodzins and Andrew Sunyar [de]) established that neutrinos have negative helicity.

Goldhaber was Director of Brookhaven National Laboratory from 1961 to 1973. His wife, physicist Gertrude Scharff Goldhaber, also spent most of her career at Brookhaven.[4] His brother Gerson Goldhaber was a professor of physics at the University of California Berkeley; his son Alfred Scharff Goldhaber is a professor of physics at SUNY Stony Brook; his grandson (son of Alfred) David Goldhaber-Gordon is a professor of physics at Stanford.[5]

Awards

Among his many other awards, he won the National Medal of Science in 1983,[6] the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 1985,[7] the J. Robert Oppenheimer Memorial Prize in 1982 (shared with Robert Marshak),[8] the Wolf Prize in 1991, shared with Valentine Telegdi "for their separate seminal contributions to nuclear and particle physics, particularly those concerning the weak interactions involving leptons",[9] and the Fermi Award in 1998. He was an elected member of the United States National Academy of Sciences,[10] the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,[11] and the American Philosophical Society.[12] Although never a Nobel laureate, he was nominated in 1962 by Otto Struve for the Nobel Prize in Physics.[13]

Death

Goldhaber died May 11, 2011, at his home in East Setauket, New York at 100.[14]

Legacy

In 2001, Brookhaven National Laboratory created the Gertrude and Maurice Goldhaber Distinguished Fellowships in his honor. These Fellowships are awarded to early-career scientists with exceptional talent and credentials who have a strong desire for independent research at the frontiers of their fields.[15]

Further reading

References

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