- Edgar Bright Wilson
Infobox_Scientist
name = Edgar Bright Wilson
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1908|12|18|mf=y
birth_place =Gallatin, Tennessee ,USA
residence =
nationality = American
death_date = death date and age|1992|6|12|1908|12|18
death_place =
field =Chemist
work_institution =Harvard University
alma_mater =
doctoral_advisor =Linus Pauling
doctoral_students =Dudley Herschbach Robert Karplus
known_for =
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr. was born on December 18, 1908 in
Gallatin, Tennessee , and died in 1992.Wilson was a prominent and accomplished
chemist and teacher, recipient of theNational Medal of Science in 1976,Guggenheim Fellowship s in 1949 and 1970, and a number of honorary doctorates. He was also the Theodore William Richards Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus atHarvard University . One of his sons,Kenneth G. Wilson , was awarded theNobel Prize in physics in 1982.Wilson was a student and protege of Nobel LaureateLinus Pauling and was a coauthor with Pauling of "Introduction to Quantum Mechanics", a graduate level textbook in Quantum Mechanics. Wilson was also the thesis advisor of Nobel LaureateDudley Herschbach . Wilson was elected to the first class of the Harvard Society of Fellows.E. Bright Wilson made major contributions to the field of
Molecular Spectroscopy . He developed the first rigorousQuantum Mechanical Hamiltonian in Internal Coordinates for a polyatomic molecule. He developed the theory for how centrifugal distortion as a molecule rotates influences its rotational spectrum. He pioneered the use ofgroup theory for the analysis and simplification normal mode analysis, particularly for high symmetry molecules, such as benzene. In 1955, with J.C. Decius and Paul C. Cross, Wilson published "Molecular Vibrations", still the primary reference text for the theoretical analysis ofvibrational spectroscopy , including theGG matrix method that Wilson had developed. Following the second world war, Wilson was a pioneer in the application ofmicrowave spectroscopy to the determination of molecular structure. Wilson wrote a influential introductory text "Introduction to Scientific Research" that provided an introduction of all the steps of scientific research, from defining a problem through the archival of data after publication.Starting in 1997, the
American Chemical Society has annually awarded theE. Bright Wilson Award in Spectroscopy , named in honor of Wilson.External Links
* [http://www.chemheritage.org/exhibits/ex-oral-detail.asp?ID=61/Chemical Heritage Foundation Oral History]
References
*cite journal
title = Biographical Memoirs: E. Bright Wilson, Jr. (18 December 1908-12 July 1992)
author = Roy Gordon; Dudley Herschbach; William Klemperer; Frank Westheimer
journal = Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society
year = 1995
volume = 139
issue = 3
pages = 312–315
unused_data = |úrl = http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-049X%28199509%29139%3A3%3C312%3AEBWJ%28D%3E2.0.CO%3B2-L
*cite book
title = Introduction to Quantum Mechanics With Applications to Chemistry
author = Linus Pauling and E. Bright Wilson, Jr., Introduction to Quantum Mechanics With Applications to Chemistry, | year = 1935
publisher = Dover Books, New York
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