Willis E.
Lamb Jr., a Nobel Prize-winning physicist whose work on the electron structure
of the hydrogen atom revolutionized the quantum theory of matter, has died. He
was 94.
Lamb died
in a Tucson hospital from complications of a
gallstone disorder May 15, according to an announcement from the University of Arizona, where he was professor emeritus
of physics and optical sciences.
Lamb worked
as a physicist at various universities from the late 1930s until retiring from
the University of
Arizona in 2002.
Lamb was
awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1955 for research he conducted while
working at Columbia
University's Columbia
Radiation Laboratory. He was working on defense-related research into microwave
sources for radar when he became interested in the properties of the hydrogen
atom.
He designed
and built a device in 1947 with Columbia
graduate student R.C. Retherford to study the effect of microwave radiation on
the hydrogen atom, according to a University
of Arizona biography.
That led to measurements that showed a change in the amount of energy emitted
from the hydrogen atom in different states that became known as the "Lamb
shift."
The
discovery led to changes in the basic concepts behind the application of
quantum theory to electromagnetism. His work became one of the foundations of
quantum electrodynamics, a key aspect of modern elementary particle physics.
"Clearly
he was a brilliant and serious scientist," his wife, Elsie Wattson Lamb,
said in a statement released by the university. "But he was also deeply
human.
"
Born July
12, 1913, in Los Angeles, California,
Lamb attended the University of California, Berkeley,
as an undergraduate and graduate student. His doctoral thesis was overseen by
J. Robert Oppenheimer, who went on to lead the U.S. effort to develop the atomic
bomb during World War II.
Lamb joined
the faculty at Columbia
University in 1938 and
became a full professor of physics. He later worked at Stanford
University and Harvard
University before becoming a fellow of
New College at the University of Oxford,
England, from 1956 to 1962.
In 1962, he
became Henry Ford II professor of physics at Yale University.
He became professor of physics and optical sciences at the University of Arizona
in 1974, a post he retained until retirement.
Lamb
married his first wife, historian Ursula Schaefer, in 1939. She died in 1996. A
second marriage ended in divorce. He married Elsie Wattson earlier this year,
and is also survived by a brother, Perry.
source: tucson.com
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