- George Randolph Kalbfleisch
Dr. George Randolph Kalbfleisch (
March 14 ,1931 –September 12 ,2006 ) was Professor Emeritus ofPhysics at theUniversity of Oklahoma .George Kalbfleisch was born March 14, 1931 in Long Beach, California, to Friedrich Carl and Hildegard Kalbfleisch. He graduated from Phineas Banning High School, Wilmington, California, in 1948. He received his Bachelor of Science degree in
chemistry from Loyola University, Los Angeles, California, in 1952. On October 23, 1954, he married Ruth Ann Adams in San Pedro, California. He received his Ph.D. in experimentalHigh Energy Physics in 1961 from theUniversity of California at Berkeley . He worked as a post-doctoral associate at the University of California at Berkeley with Dr.Luis Alvarez , as a staffphysicist atBrookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, New York, for twelve years, and at Fermi National Laboratory (Fermilab ) in Batavia, Illinois, for three years. He performed experiments in the systematizing and the discovery of new particles since 1958, using beams ofmuons ,pions ,kaons ,protons andantiprotons , andneutrinos . He worked with liquid hydrogenbubble chamber s until 1972, and subsequently worked with electronic spectrometers. He performed research atCERN Laboratory in Switzerland during a sabbatical in 1972. While at Fermilab, he was in charge of the superconducting quadrupoles for the Tevatron (at that time, the world's highest energy machine), built more than twenty prototype quadrupoles, and developed and provided the production tooling from which more than 200 quadrupoles were made for theTevatron .Dr. Kalbfleisch came to the
University of Oklahoma (OU) in 1979 where he established the OU High Energy Physics group (OU-HEP). He was elected as a Fellow in theAmerican Physical Society in 1982 for his discoveries of the first hyperonic beta decay, of the ninth pseudoscalar meson, the first direct observation of the electron-neutrino in muon decay and direct measurements of the velocities of neutrinos. In 1990, he established a sister High Energy Physics group atLangston University , Langston, Oklahoma. He was a consultant for theSuperconducting Super Collider Laboratory in Waxahachie, Texas until the United States Government canceled that project in 1993. In 1999, Dr. Kalbfleisch retired from teaching at the University of Oklahoma, although he continued conducting research as Professor Emeritus of Physics until a few weeks before his death. In 2001, he was the first physicist inducted into the inaugural Alumni Wall of Fame atLoyola Marymount University , in honor of his lifetime achievements. His research has included the study of "charm quark " and "beauty quark " quantum states at Fermilab and neutrino properties in-house at OU, and was supported by continuing grants from theUnited States Department of Energy . He finished the search for low mass accelerator produced magnetic monopoles (E-882, 1995) approved by Fermilab and performed at OU. Most recently, he worked on an EDM (electric dipole moment ) of the electron experiment at OU, with younger collaborators. He published more than one hundred and ninety articles in elementary particle physics.External links
* [http://www.kalbfleisch.us/ Online obituary]
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