- Allan McLeod Cormack
Infobox Scientist
name = Allan MacLeod Cormack
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caption = Allan M. Cormack atTufts University deletable image-caption|Wednesday, May 07 2008
birth_date =February 23 ,1924
birth_place =Johannesburg, Gauteng
death_date =May 07 ,1998
death_place =Massachusetts
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citizenship =
nationality =United States
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field =Physicist
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known_for =Computed tomography
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prizes =Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1979
footnotes =Allan MacLeod Cormack (
February 23 ,1924 –May 7 ,1998 ) was aSouth Africa n-born Americanphysicist who won the 1979Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (along withGodfrey Hounsfield ) for his work onx-ray computed tomography (CT).Cormack was born in
Johannesburg , South Africa. He attended theRondebosch Boys' High School inCape Town , where he was active in the debating and tennis teams. He received his B.Sc. inphysics in 1944 from theUniversity of Cape Town and his M.Sc. incrystallography in 1945 from the same institution. He was a research student at Cambridge University from 1947-49, and while at Cambridge he met his future wife, Barbara Seavey, an American physics student.After marrying Seavey, he returned to the University of Cape Town in early 1950 to lecture. Following a sabbatical at
Harvard in 1956-57, the couple agreed to move to the United States, and Cormack became a professor atTufts University in the fall of 1957. Cormack became anaturalized citizen of the United States in 1966. Although he was mainly working onparticle physics , Cormack's side interest in x-ray technology led him to develop the theoretical underpinnings of CT scanning. This work was initiated at the University of Cape Town andGroote Schuur Hospital in early 1956 and continued briefly in mid-1957 after returning from his sabbatical. His results were subsequently published in two papers in the Journal of Applied Physics in 1963 and 1964. These papers generated little interest until Hounsfield and colleagues built the first CT scanner in 1971, taking Cormack's theoretical calculations into a real application. For their independent efforts, Cormack and Hounsfield shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. He was member of theInternational Academy of Science .Cormack died of cancer in Massachusetts at age 74. He was posthumously awarded the
Order of Mapungubwe on the10 December 2002 for outstanding achievements as a scientist and for co-inventing the CT scanner.External links
* [http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1979/cormack-autobio.html Nobel Prize Biography]
* [http://www.amazon.co.uk/Imagining-Elephant-Biography-MacLeod-Cormack/dp/1860949886 Imagining the Elephant (Allan Cormack Biography) by CL Vaughan]
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