- Willard Libby
Infobox_Scientist
name = Willard Frank Libby
image_width =
caption = Willard Libby
birth_date =December 17 ,1908
birth_place = Grand Valley, Colorado,Colorado
residence =United States
nationality = American
death_date = death date and age|1980|9|8|1908|12|3
death_place =Cambridge ,England
field =Radioactivity
work_institution =Columbia University University of Chicago University of California, Los Angeles
alma_mater =University of California, Berkeley Princeton University
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for =Radiocarbon dating
prizes =Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1960)
religion =
footnotes =Willard Frank Libby (
December 17 ,1908 –September 8 ,1980 ) was an American physical chemist, famous for his role in the 1949 development ofradiocarbon dating , a process which revolutionizedarchaeology .Libby was born in Grand Valley, Colorado. He received his B.S. in 1931 and Ph.D. in 1933 in chemistry from the
University of California, Berkeley , where he then became a lecturer and later assistant professor. Libby spent the 1930s building sensitivegeiger counter s to measure weak natural and artificial radioactivity. In 1941 he joined Berkeley's chapter ofAlpha Chi Sigma .Awarded a
Guggenheim Fellowship , he spent most of 1941 atPrinceton University . After the start of World War II, he worked on theManhattan Project atColumbia University with Nobel laureate chemistHarold Urey . Libby was responsible for thegaseous diffusion separation and enrichment of theUranium-235 which was used in theatomic bomb onHiroshima .In 1945 he became a professor at the
University of Chicago . In 1954, he was appointed to theU.S. Atomic Energy Commission . In 1959, he became Professor of Chemistry atUniversity of California, Los Angeles , a position he held until his retirement in 1976. He taught honors freshman chemistry from 1959 to 1963 (in keeping with a University tradition that senior faculty teach this class). He was Director of theUniversity of California statewide Institute ofGeophysics and Planetary Physics (IGPP) for many years including the lunar landing time. In 1966 he married Leona Woods Marshall, an original experimentor on the world's firstnuclear reactor and a UCLA professor of environmental engineering. He also started the first Environmental Engineering program atUCLA in 1972.In 1960, Libby was awarded the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for leading the team (namely, post-doc James Arnold and graduate student Ernie Anderson, with a $5,000 grant) that developed Carbon-14 dating. He also discovered that tritium could be used for dating water, and therefore wine.He attended
Analy High School inSebastopol, CA . The school library has a mural of Libby, and a nearby highway is named in his honor.Works
*Libby, Willard F., "Radiocarbon dating", 2d ed., University of Chicago Press, 1955.
External links
* [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1960/libby-bio.html The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1960]
* [http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/klmno/libby_willard.html Biography of Willard Libby]
* [http://www.english.ucla.edu/ucla1960s/6667/shonnard2.htm UCLA Biography]
* [http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/specialcollections/coll/pauling/peace/people/libby.html A digitized collection of documents] related to Libby's contacts withLinus Pauling References
*cite journal
title=Atmospheric Helium Three and Radiocarbon from Cosmic Radiation | author=W.F. Libby | journal=Physical Review | volume=69 | issue=11-12 | pages=671–672 | year=1946 | url=http://link.aps.org/abstract/PR/v69/p671/s2 | doi=10.1103/PhysRev.69.671.2
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