- Felix Villars
Infobox_Scientist
name=Felix Villars
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1921|1|6|df=y
birth_place =Biel ,Switzerland
death_date = death date and age|2002|4|27|1921|1|6|df=y
death_place =Belmont, Massachusetts
alma_mater =ETH Zurich
work_institution =ETH Zurich ,Institute for Advanced Study ,MIT
known_for =Pauli-Villars regularization
spouse = Jacqueline DuboisFelix Villars (
6 January 1921 -27 April 2002 ) was an emeritus professor ofphysics atMIT . He is best known for thePauli-Villars regularization , an important principle inquantum field theory .Early life
Villars was born in
Biel ,Switzerland and served in the Swiss Army during theSecond World War , working as a meteorologist. In 1945, he graduated from theSwiss Federal Institute of Technology with degrees in physics and mathematics. His undergraduate thesis earned him the Institute's Kern Medal for Excellence. The following year, Villars earned his doctorate in physics from the same institution.From 1946 to 1949, Villars worked as a research assistant at the Swiss Federal Institute. While there, he collaborated with
Wolfgang Pauli on work in quantum electrodynamics. They developed a method of dealing with mathematical singularities in quantum field theory, in order to extract finite physical results. This method, Pauli-Villars regularization, is used by physicists when working with field theory.In 1949, Villars married the former Jacqueline Dubois and moved to the United States. He worked for a year at the
Institute for Advanced Study inPrinceton, New Jersey .MIT career
In 1950, Villars was hired as a research associate at MIT and eventually became a full professor in 1959. Along with
Victor Weisskopf , he studied the scattering of radio waves owing to atmospheric turbulence. WithHerman Feshbach , he studied the effect of the Earth's magnetic field on theionosphere .It was biology, however, that captured his imagination. Villars applied mathematical methods to studying the functioning of biological systems, yielding insights that had been missed by biologists and medical researchers who had been studying them for years.
Villars was a key figure in creating the
Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology , a collaboration betweenHarvard University and MIT. Villars was also a visiting lecturer atHarvard Medical School . With MIT physics professorGeorge B. Benedek , he wrote a three-volume undergraduate textbook, "Physics with Illustrative Examples from Medicine and Biology".Villars died of cancer at his home in
Belmont, Massachusetts on27 April 2002 . He was 81.Books
* cite book
title=Physics with Illustrative Examples from Medicine and Biology: Mechanics
first=Felix
last=Villars
coauthors=George B. Benedek
publisher=Springer Verlag
year=2000
edition=second edition* cite book
title=Physics with Illustrative Examples from Medicine and Biology: Electricity and Magnetism
first=Felix
last=Villars
coauthors=George B. Benedek
publisher=Springer Verlag
year=2006
edition=second edition* cite book
title=Physics with Illustrative Examples from Medicine and Biology: Statistical Physics
first=Felix
last=Villars
coauthors=George B. Benedek
publisher=Springer Verlag
year=2006
edition=second editionExternal links
* [http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2002/villars.html Obituary of Felix Villars from the MIT News Office]
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