Everything about Isidor Isaac Rabi totally explained
Isidor Isaac Rabi (
July 29,
1898 –
January 11,
1988)
Galician-born
physicist, and
Nobel laureate.
Biography
Rabi was born in
Rymanów,
Galicia, Austrian Empire (now Poland), and was brought to the United States as a child the following year. He achieved a
Bachelor of Science in
Chemistry degree from
Cornell University in 1919, continuing his studies at
Columbia University and received his Ph.D. in 1927. A fellowship enabled him to spend the next two years in Europe working with such eminent physicists as
Niels Bohr,
Werner Heisenberg,
Wolfgang Pauli and
Otto Stern. He then joined the Columbia faculty and never left.
In 1930 Rabi conducted investigations into the nature of the force binding protons to atomic nuclei. This research eventually led to the creation of the molecular-beam magnetic-resonance detection method, for which he was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Physics in 1944.
In 1940 he was granted leave from Columbia to work as Associate Director of the Radiation Laboratory at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology on the development of
radar and the Atomic bomb,
(External Link
) which killed an estimated 140,000 people in Hiroshima and a further 80,000 in Nagasaki.
(External Link
) Some say that he reluctantly agreed to serve as a visiting consultant who would come and go from
Los Alamos, where he was one of the very few exceptions to the strict security rules there. General
Groves made a special effort to bring Rabi, who had been a student with
Oppenheimer and maintained a close and mutually respectful relationship, out to Los Alamos for the days leading up to the Trinity test so that he could help Oppenheimer maintain his sanity under such intense pressure.
After the war he continued his research, which contributed to the inventions of the laser and the atomic clock. He was also one of the founders of both
Brookhaven National Laboratory and
CERN, and served as U.S. President
Harry S. Truman's second
Science Advisor.
Rabi chaired Columbia's physics department from 1945 to 1949, a period during which it was home to two Nobel Laureates (Rabi and
Enrico Fermi) and eleven future laureates, including seven faculty (
Polykarp Kusch,
Willis Lamb,
Maria Goeppert-Mayer,
James Rainwater,
Norman Ramsey,
Charles Townes and
Hideki Yukawa), a research scientist (
Aage Bohr), a visiting professor (
Hans Bethe), a doctoral student (
Leon Lederman) and an undergrad (
Leon Cooper). When Columbia created the rank of University Professor in 1964, Rabi was the first to receive such a chair. He retired from teaching in 1967 but remained active in the department and held the title of University Professor Emeritus and Special Lecturer until his death on
January 11,
1988.
He famously remarked that "the world would be better without an
Edward Teller." He is also known for asking, "Who ordered the
muon?"
Dr. Rabi is the recipient of The International Center in New York's Award of Excellence.
- Father: David Rabi
- Mother: Janet Teig
- Wife: Helen Newmark (m. 1926, two daughters)
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