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Arthur Jeffrey Dempster

 
Statistics Dictionary: Arthur Pentland Dempster

(1929–  ; b. Toronto, Canada) Canadian statistician specializing in statistical inference whose career has been in the United States. Dempster obtained his BA and MA from U Toronto and his PhD (supervised by Tukey) from Princeton U in 1956. He joined the one-year-old Department of Statistics at Harvard U in 1958, chairing the Department between 1969 and 1979 and continuing to teach there until 2005. In 1968 he introduced a generalization of Bayesian inference. In 1977 he was the senior author of the paper introducing the EM algorithm that dealt with the analysis of incomplete multivariate data. He was the IMS Neyman Lecturer in 1986 and the COPSS Fisher Lecturer in 1998.



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Scientist: Arthur Jeffrey Dempster
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Canadian–American physicist (1886–1950)

Dempster was born in Toronto, Ontario, in Canada and educated at the university there. He emigrated to America in 1914, attended the University of Chicago, obtained his PhD in 1916, and began teaching in 1919. In 1927, he was made professor of physics.

He is noted for his early developments of and work with the mass spectrograph (invented by Francis W. Aston). In 1935, he was able to show that uranium did not consist solely of the isotope uranium–238, for seven out of every thousand uranium atoms were in fact uranium–235. It was this isotope, 235U, that was later predicted by Niels Bohr to be capable of sustaining a chain reaction that could release large amounts of atomic fission energy.

Wikipedia: Arthur Jeffrey Dempster
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Arthur Jeffrey Dempster

Born August 14, 1886
Toronto, Canada
Died 1950
Stuart, Florida
Nationality Canadian-American
Fields physicist
Alma mater B.S. University of Toronto
M.S. University of Toronto
Ph.D. University of Chicago
Known for Developed the first modern mass spectrometer, discovered 235U (used in atomic bombs)

Arthur Jeffrey Dempster (August 14, 1886 - March 11, 1950) was a Canadian-American physicist best known for his work in mass spectrometry and his discovery of the uranium isotope 235U.

Biography

Dempster's 1918 mass spectrometer.

Dempster was born in Toronto, Canada. He received his bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Toronto in 1909 and 1910, respectively. He travelled to study in Germany, and then left at the outset of World War I for the United States; there he received his Ph.D. in physics at the University of Chicago. Dempster then joined the physics faculty there in 1916, teaching and researching until his death in 1950, interrupted only during World War II, when he worked on the secret Manhattan Project to develop the world's first nuclear weapons. From 1943 to 1946, he was chief physicist of the University of Chicago's Metallurgical Laboratory or "Met Lab" (this lab was integrally related to the Manhattan Project: it was founded to study the materials necessary for the manufacture of atomic bombs), and in 1946 took a position as a division director at the Argonne National Laboratory. Dempster died in 1950 in Stuart, Florida.

Research

In 1918, Dempster developed the first modern mass spectrometer, a scientific apparatus allowing physicists to identify compounds by the mass of elements in a sample, and determine the isotopic composition of elements in a sample.[1] Dempster's mass spectrometer was over 100 times more accurate than previous versions, and established the basic theory and design of mass spectrometers that is still used to this day. Dempster's research over his career centered around the mass spectrometer and its applications, leading in 1935 to his discovery of the uranium isotope 235U. This isotope's ability to cause a rapidly expanding fission nuclear chain reaction allowed the development of the atom bomb and nuclear power. Dempster was also well known as an authority on positive rays.

References

  1. ^ Dempster, A. J. (April 1918). "A New Method of Positive Ray Analysis" (PDF). Phys. Rev. 11 (4): 316–325. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.11.316. http://link.aps.org/abstract/PR/v11/p316. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 

 
 

 

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