- William Vermillion Houston
Infobox_Scientist
name = William Vermillion Houston
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birth_date = January 19, 1900
birth_place = Mount Gilead,Ohio , U.S.
death_date = August 22, 1968
death_place =Edinburgh ,Scotland
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nationality = American
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field =Physics
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prizes = Rice University Medal of Honor - 1962
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footnotes =William Vermillion Houston (January 19, 1900 in Mount Gilead,
Ohio , U.S. – August 22, 1968 inEdinburgh ,Scotland ) was an Americanphysicist who made contributions to spectroscopy, quantum mechanics, and solid-state physics as well as being a teacher and administrator.Education
Houston began his college education in 1916 at
Ohio State University (OSU) where he earned his baccalaureate degree in physics. He served in the military during 1918 and 1919. After teaching physics at theUniversity of Dubuque for one year, he entered graduate studies at theUniversity of Chicago and studied underA. A. Michelson , who had won theNobel Prize in Physics in 1907, andRobert Millikan who would win the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1923 for his measurement of the charge on the electron and for his work on the photoelectric effect. It was at this time that Houston began his experimental work on the fine structure of hydrogen. In 1922, he returned to OSU where he was an instructor in physics and studied spectroscopy under A. D. Cole. Houston was granted his Ph.D. in 1925, after which he went to theCalifornia Institute of Technology (Caltech) on a National Research Fellowship, largely because Millikan had left Chicago for Caltech in 1922. At Caltech Houston continued his work in spectroscopy and making improvements in Fabry-Pérot interferometry. At Caltech, he taught a spectroscopy course out of "Atombau und Spektrallinien", which became the “bible” [ Kragh, 2002, p. 155.] of atomic theory for the new generation of physicists who developed atomic and quantum physics. In 1927 and 1928, Houston was awarded aGuggenheim Fellowship , which he used to go toGermany to do postgraduate study withArnold Sommerfeld at theLudwig Maximilians University of Munich andWerner Heisenberg at theUniversity of Leipzig . Also studying with Sommerfeld concurrently with Houston wereCarl Eckart ,Edwin C. Kemble , andRudolf Peierls . At that time, the winter semester of 1927, [ [http://www.lrz-muenchen.de/~Sommerfeld/KurzFass/03059.html Houston – May 1927] – Sommerfeld Project] Sommerfeld, in his special lectures, treated the theory of electrons in metals for the first time. As a course of study, Sommerfeld suggested to Houston that he investigate the mean free path of electrons and its relationship to resistance in metals as a function of temperature. Sommerfeld showed Houston the proof of a paper soon be published on the subject of Fermi statistics applied to phenomena in metals. Houston’s work on the subject was published in a paper coauthored with Sommerfeld and Eckart. [ A. Sommerfeld, W. V. Houston, and C. Eckart,"Zeits. f. Physik" 47, 1 (1928)] After spending the winter semester of 1927 with Sommerfeld, Houston went to spend the spring semester of 1928 with Heisenberg in Leipzig. There, he studied the spin-orbit interaction in two-electron spectra. Houston was able to show the transition from Russell-Saunders coupling to jj-coupling in two-electron systems and its influence on theZeeman effect . It was at this time that Houston formed a professional and personal friendship withFelix Bloch , who did pioneering work on the motion of electrons in periodic structures. [ [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=567&page=130 Houston Biography] – The National Academies Press] [ [http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/guides/ahqp/ Author Catalog: Houston] – American Philosophical Society] [ [http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/guides/ahqp/bios.htm Sommerfeld Biography] – American Philosophical Society] [ Arnold Sommerfeld "Some Reminiscences of My Teaching Career", "American Journal of Physics" 17 (5) 315-316 (1949)]Career
After his study and research in Germany, Houston returned to Caltech and served as an assistant professor (1927 – 1929), associate professor (1929 – 1931), and professor (1931 – 1946). [ [http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/guides/ahqp/ Author Catalog: Houston] – American Philosophical Society] He again took up his experimental work on spectroscopy and the theory of electrons in atoms and solids. His work on the Zeeman effect resulted in a correction to the accepted value of the e/m ratio, as well as stimulating R. T. Birge and J. W. M. Dumond to work up a consistent set of precise atomic constants. In
solid-state physics he studied the surfacephotoelectric effect and made the first suggestion and analysis of the use of soft x-rays to investigate the energy bands of solids. At Caltech, and later atRice University , he taught a course on mathematical physics, for which he wrote a textbook. [ [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=567&page=130 Houston Biography] – The National Academies Press]During
World War II , through the influence of Dr. Frank B. Jewett of the National Academy of Sciences, Houston became involved in undersea warfare research and development, for which he also had supervisory responsibility at installations atHarvard University ,San Diego , andKey West . [ [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=567&page=130 Houston Biography] – The National Academies Press]In 1946, Houston became the second president of
Rice University inHouston ,Texas , where he served as president and professor until 1961. He resigned as president after a serious illness in 1961, but continued his teaching responsibilities. As president, Houston brought many advancements to the university, including enlargement of the graduate school, a five-year engineering program, lowering of the student-teacher ratio to 10:1, and fostering a closer relationship between the students and faculty. [ [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=567&page=130 Houston Biography] – The National Academies Press]In 1953, Houston wrote a review of Sommerfeld’s first volume of the six-volume "Lectures on Theoretical Physics", based on Sommerfeld’s six-semester course on theoretical physics. [ Arnold Sommerfeld, Author and W. V. Houston, Reviewer "Mechanics, Lectures on Theoretical Physics", "American Journal of Physics" Volume 21, Issue 5, p. 399 (1953)]
Houston was productive until the day he died in Edinburgh, Scotland on August 22, 1968. He was survived by his wife, Mildred nee White, whom he married in 1924. [ [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=567&page=130 Houston Biography] – The National Academies Press]
Books
*William V. Houston "Principles of Mathematical Physics" (McGraw-Hill, 1934 and 1948)
*William V. Houston "Principles of Quantum Mechanics" (McGraw-Hill, 1951)
*William V. Houston "Principles of Quantum Mechanics, Non-relativistic Wave Mechanics with Illustrative Applications" (Dover, 1959)
Professional Organizations
*
American Physical Society and serving as president in 1962*
American Philosophical Society Honors
*1943 – Elected to the National Academy of Sciences with service on the Council (1959 – 1962)
*Board member of the
Carnegie Foundation *Elected as Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences *Navy Medal of Merit presented by the Secretary of the Navy for services during World War II
* Presidential appointment to the Board of the
National Science Foundation *1962 – Rice University Medal of Honor
elected Publications
*A. Sommerfeld, W. V. Houston, and C. Eckart, "Zeits. f. Physik" 47, 1 (1928)
*W. V. Houston, "The Physical Content of Quantum Mechanics," 5 (2), 49-55 (1937). Paper cited in Robert H. Romer "Editorial: Memorable papers from the American Journal of Physics, 1933-1990", "Am. J. Phys." 59 (3), 201-207, March 1991
References
*Arnold Sommerfeld "Some Reminiscences of My Teaching Career", "American Journal of Physics" 17 (5) 315-316 (1949)
*Kragh, Helge "Quantum Generations: A History of Physics in the Twentieth Century " (Princeton University Press, fifth printing and first paperback printing, 2002) ISBN 0-691-01206-7
Notes
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