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Willis Lamb

 
Scientist: Jr. Willis Eugene Lamb
 

American physicist (1913–)

Born in Los Angeles, Lamb was a student at the University of California, Berkeley, graduating in chemistry in 1934 and gaining his PhD in physics in 1938. His thesis research, on the electromagnetic properties of nuclear systems, was directed by J. Robert Oppenheimer. In 1938 he became an instructor in physics at Columbia University, New York, becoming a professor in 1948, and from 1943 to 1951 he was also associated with the Columbia Radiation Laboratory. It was at Columbia that he performed the experiments on the fine structure of the hydrogen spectrum that led to his receiving the 1955 Nobel Prize for physics.

Shortly after World War II, Lamb began his work to check the accuracy of the predictions of Paul Dirac as they related to the energy levels and spectral lines of hydrogen. Dirac's quantum mechanical theory predicted that the hydrogen atom had two possible energy states with equal energies. Lamb's accurate work using radiofrequency resonance techniques, reported in 1947, revealed that there was a minute difference in these energy levels. Small as it was, this Lamb shift necessitated a revision of the theory of the interaction of the electron with electromagnetic radiation. For this work Lamb was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics, which he shared with another leader of research at Columbia, Polykarp Kusch, with whom he had performed wartime research in developing microwave radar.

In 1951 Lamb was made a professor of physics at Stanford. There he devised microwave techniques for examining the hyperfine structure of the spectral lines of helium. In 1956 he took a professorship in England at Oxford University, and in 1962 returned to America to a professorship at Yale. Since 1974 he has been professor of physical and optical sciences at the University of Arizona's department of physics.

His publications include Laser Physics (1974), written in collaboration with M. Sargent and M. O. Scully.

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Wikipedia: Willis Lamb
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Willis Lamb
Willis Eugene Lamb Jr. (1913-2008)
Willis Eugene Lamb Jr. (1913-2008)
Born July 12, 1913(1913-07-12)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Died May 15, 2008 (aged 94)
Tucson, Arizona, U.S.
Nationality United States
Fields Physics
Institutions University of Arizona
University of Oxford
Yale
Columbia
Stanford
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley
Doctoral advisor J. Robert Oppenheimer
Doctoral students Theodore Maiman
Marlan Scully
Balázs László Győrffy
Frederick Hopf
Murray Sargent III
Stanley L. Kaufman
David Mader
Ralph Jacobs
Known for Lamb shift
Laser Theory
Quantum Optics
Notable awards Nobel Prize in Physics (1955)

Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr. (July 12, 1913May 15, 2008) was a physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1955 "for his discoveries concerning the fine structure of the hydrogen spectrum". Lamb and Polykarp Kusch were able to precisely determine certain electromagnetic properties of the electron. See Lamb shift. Lamb was a professor at the University of Arizona.

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. Lamb was the Wykeham Professor of Physics at the University of Oxford from 1956 to 1962, and also taught at Yale, Columbia, Stanford and the University of Arizona. Lamb died on May 15, 2008, at the age of 94.

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