- John Robert Schrieffer
Infobox academic
name = Dr. John Robert Schrieffer
image_size = 150px
birth_date =May 31 ,1931
birth_place =
nationality =United States
field = Physics
work_institutions =University of California, Santa Barbara University of Florida Florida State University
alma_mater =Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Illinois
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for =
prizes =Nobel Prize for Physics (1972 )John Robert Schrieffer (born
May 31 ,1931 ) is an American physicist and, withJohn Bardeen andLeon Neil Cooper , recipient of the1972 Nobel Prize of Physics for developing theBCS theory , the first successful microscopic theory ofsuperconductivity .Biography
Schrieffer was born in
Oak Park, Illinois , but his family moved in 1940 toManhasset, New York , and then in 1947 toEustis, Florida , where his father a former pharmaceutical salesman began a career in the citrus industry. In his Florida days, Schrieffer enjoyed playing with homemade rockets and ham radio, a hobby that sparked an interest in electrical engineering.After graduating from Eustis High School in 1949, Schrieffer was admitted to the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology , where for two years he majored in electrical engineering before switching to physics in his junior year. He completed a bachelor's thesis on multiplets in heavy atoms under the direction ofJohn C. Slater in 1953. Pursuing an interest in solid-state physics, Schrieffer began graduate studies at theUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , where he was hired immediately as a research assistant to John Bardeen. After working out a theoretical problem of electrical conduction on semiconductor surfaces, Schrieffer spent a year in the laboratory, applying the theory to several surface problems. In his third year of graduate studies, he joined Bardeen and Leon Cooper in developing the theory of superconductivity.Schrieffer recalls that in January 1957 he was on a subway in
New York City when he had an idea of how to describe mathematically the ground state of superconducting atoms. Schrieffer and Bardeen’s collaborator Cooper had discovered that electrons in a superconductor are grouped in pairs, now calledCooper pairs , and that the motions of all Cooper pairs within a single superconductor are correlated and function as a single entity. Schrieffer’s mathematical breakthrough was to describe the behavior of all Cooper pairs at the same time instead of each individual pair. The day after returning to Illinois, Schrieffer showed his equations to Bardeen who immediately realized they were the solution to the problem. The BCS theory (Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer) of superconductivity, as it is now known, accounted for more than 30 years of experimental results that had stymied some of the greatest theorists in physics.After completing his doctoral dissertation on the theory of superconductivity, Schrieffer spent the 1957-58 academic year as a
National Science Foundation fellow at theUniversity of Birmingham in England and at theNiels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, where he continued research into superconductivity. Following a year as assistant professor at the University of Chicago, he returned to the University of Illinois in 1959 as a faculty member. In 1960, he went back to the Bohr Institute for a summer visit, during which he became engaged to Anne Grete Thomsen whom he married at Christmas of that year. Two years later, Schrieffer joined the faculty of theUniversity of Pennsylvania inPhiladelphia , and, in 1964, Schrieffer published his book on the BCS theory, Theory of Superconductivity. He holds honorary degrees from theTechnical University of Munich and theUniversity of Geneva .In 1972, Schrieffer along with John Bardeen and Leon Cooper won the 1972 Nobel Prize in Physics for developing the BCS theory. In 1980, Schrieffer became a professor at the
University of California, Santa Barbara , and rose to chancellor professor in 1984, serving as director of the university’sKavli Institute for Theoretical Physics . In 1992,Florida State University appointed Schrieffer as a university eminent scholar professor and chief scientist of theNational High Magnetic Field Laboratory , where he continued to pursue one of the great goals in physics: room temperature superconductivity.Schrieffer was sentenced to two years in
prison November 6 ,2005 forvehicular manslaughter killing one, and injuring seven people. At the time of the accident hisdrivers license was under suspension and he is said to have fallen asleep at the wheel. The accident occurred inOrcutt, California onSeptember 24 2004 , incarcerated in Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility at Rock Mountain nearSan Diego, California . [cite news | author=The Associated Press | title=Nobel Prize-Winning Physicist Gets Two Years in Prison for Deadly Crash | url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,174832,00.html | work=Fox News | date=07 November 2005 | accessdate=2008-02-24]References
External links
* [http://www.osti.gov/accomplishments/schrieffer.html Photograph, Biography and Bibliographic Resources] , from the
Office of Scientific and Technical Information ,United States Department of Energy
* [http://physics.nobel.brainparad.com/john_robert_schrieffer.html John Robert Schrieffer]
* [http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1972/schrieffer-bio.html Nobel bio]
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