Rejoice in Slac's Nobel Prize
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I4* 0S r^ * *|_ SEvents and Happenings e^I n ter~actir~o^n Poin t in the SLAC Community 1-=I§~~lJ ; I I. U |l IU IINovember 1990, Vol. ,1, No. 7 _ Friedman,Kendall, Taylor, and Us, Too ALL REJOICE IN SLAC'S NOBEL PRIZE by Bill Kirk THE NEWS RELEASE from Stockholm started this way: The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly to Professors Jerome I. Friedman and Henry W. Kendall, both of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA, and RichardE. Taylor of Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA, for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics. The news release then went on to describe the significance of this SLAC- MIT experiment, tracing the series of discoveries in this century that have disclosed ever-smaller layers in the structure of matter: atom, nucleus, proton, quark.... It was interesting to read about the earlier work of such (cont'd. on pg. 2) 1 1970 SLAC Employees (cont'd. from pg. 1) renowned physicists as Ruther- I tHere in 1990 ford, Heisenberg, Chadwick Hofstadter and Gell-Mann. These Louise Addis John Cockroft and others are the people who James Alexander Fred Coffer Matthew Allen Gerarda Collet paved the way for the SLAC-MIT Richard Allen Harry Collins group to know what experiments Eugenio Alvarado Carol Colon Sal Alvarado Steven Combs to do and even, to some extent, Roger Anderson Nada Comstock how to do them. This is just a long- Leroy Andrade Patrick Conroy Apolinar Arechiga Theodore Constant winded way of saying what every- Marie Arnold Ruth Consul one already knows: that science Kathy Asher Les Cottrell Wesley Asher David Coward builds upon the science that has Alonzo Ashley George Crane gone before. Probably Isaac John Ashton Kenneth Crook Gary Aske Roderick Curry Newton said it best when he said Edward Austin Percy Cutler something like, "If I have seen Ronald Baggs Cathie Dager Margie Bangali Bill Davies-White further than other men, it is Loy Barker Robert Davis because I have stood upon the Antonio Barrera Norman Dean Frank Barrera Abel Delacerda shoulders of giants." [Editor's Note: Robert Beach Bernard Denton Speaking of giants, if the Swedish Mary Beerbohm Hank Deruyter Robert Bell Herbert deStaebler Academy had decided to break its Winston Bell Charles Dickens long-standing traditionof never Anthony Benedetti Deborah Dixon Leonard Berg Jean Drayer awarding the Prize to more than three Willard Bergen Sidney Drell individuals, the 1990 Nobel Prize in Martin Berndt Katherine Duggan John Bernstein Doug Dupen Physics would probably have included Boris Bertolucci Richard Early James D. Bjorken and Wolfgang K. H. Richard Bierce Robert Eisele Stanley Billitzer Justino Escalera Panofsky-Bj and Pief.] James Bjorken Judge Ewing But in this day and age of big Vern Bland Zoltan Farkas Dick Blankenbecler Salvatore Fazzino machines and bigger laboratories, Elliott Bloom Larry Feathers it takes a lot more than just the Richard Blumberg James Ferrie Shirley Bobo Theodore Fieguth shoulders of Newton's giants to David Bostic Gerhard Fischer discover new things. It takes the Gordon Bowden Joel Fitch Adam Boyarski Randall Fowkes minds and hands of engineers and William Bozdeck Jean Francis librarians, of technicians and secre- Marty Breidenbach Charles Freudenthal Barbara Brenner Jerome Friedman taries, of machinists and program- Loren Brest David Fryberger mers, of designers and administra- Stanley Brodsky Richard Fuendeling cD-: tors. > John Broeder Alexander Gallegos I Wouter Broers Edward Garwin After thinking about these (D John Brown Roger Gearhart things, I dug out of an old file a ^a Karl Brown Franco Generali - aa~~· ~ ~ Michael Browne Leonard Genova copy of the SLAC Picture Book for Willys Brunk Robert Gex Mickey Bryant Donald Gill 1970, by which time it had become Fatin Bulos John Gill very clear that the SLAC-MIT Kirk Bunnell Frederick Gilman George Burgueno Boris Golceff experiments were onto something Carolyn Burton William Graham big (since it was quarks, maybe Donald Busick Charles Granieri Bobbie Byers John Grant "something small" is better). That Carl Caldwell Michael Gravina Picture Book contains 45 pages, Richard Callin Harry Greenhill Richerd Cancilla Charley Griffin each with 30 pictures and names. Arthur Candia Anthony Gromme These are the 1350 people who Merrill Card Richard Gross John Carey Albert Guidi were making the SLAC laboratory Steven Carlson Frank Guidi work in 1970-who were respon- Emmett Carmena Celik Guracar George Chadwick David Gustavson sible in direct or indirect ways for Chuck Chin Edward Guthrie supporting the experiments that Eugene Cisneros. Finn Halbo Charles Class Robert Hall were going to win the Nobel Prize Percy Clay John Halperin in Physics in 1990. William Clayton David Hamilton Joseph Cobb Vern Hamilton (ont'd. on:6next pag ) (cont'd. on next page) 2 1970 SLAC Employees Here in 1990 ey t B I Now a question: Of the 1350 members of the SLAC staff in 1970, how many do you suppose are still work- ing here in 1990? The answer is an amazing 366! All of these people deserve special mention, because all of them had a hand in winning the Prize. These 366 Prize co-winners are the 20-year veterans who are listed on this and the preceding page. One more thing: In going through the 1970 Picture Book, I ran across many pictures of people who for one reason or another are no longer with us-retired, deceased, or moved on. I won't try to list all of them, but let me list some of them in order to represent the rest of the 1970 staff, and to generate a little nostalgia among SLAC's old-timers. Here are some names from the past: John Alcorn Ralph Hashagen Fred Pindar Joe Ballam Charley Hoard Franz Plunder Arpad Barna John Jasberg Jim Pope Aaron Baumgarten Ted Johnston Joe Pulis Anna Laura Berg Glenda Jones Willy Roberts Bob Boesenberg Joe Jurow Gene Roe Habib Brechna Al Kilert Betty Roe Kurt Breymeyer Libby Kopecky Ray Sandkuhle Lucille Burch Larry Kral Matt Sands Lee Cain Marie LaBelle Dick Scholl Harry Changnon Ray Larsen Leroy Schwartz Kris Ciolkosz Jean Lebacqz Ed Seppi En-lung Chu Barbara Lopiccolo Louise Shreve Jim Cook Ken Mallory Vi Smoyer Barbara Coppock Bob Mills Harry Soderstrom Mack Dillard Helen Morrison Arlene Spurlock Dorothy Edminster Jim Moss Leo Stodolsky Paul Edwards Bob Moulton Mil Strachan Joe Faust Bob Mozley Glenn Tenney Chris Ferrari Dick Neal Alex Tseng Win Field Carl Olson Frank Veldhuizen Joe Fish George Owens Bill Wadley Axel Golde Jean Paist Bob Watt Bob Gould Pief Panofsky Herm Zaiss Fred Hall Bob Pedersen Walter Zawojski Slim Harris Bob Phillips Martha Zipf When Dick Taylor attended a press conference on the morning of October 17, a few hours after he had been notified of his Nobel Prize, he was asked a question about the size of the group of people who had carried out the experiment. He ended his response by saying, (cont'd. on pg. 6) 3 RESEARCH DIVISION INCREASES SCIENTIFIC STAFF by Steve Williams Richard Dubois .. Greg Hallewell... Arthur Snyder... RICHARD DUBOIS has joined the SLAC staff as a physicist in the SLD group. There he will pursue his interests in Z physics, especially with his contributions to the devel- opment of the offline analysis. He has made contributions to the GREG HALLEWELL, SLD, received ARTHUR SNYDER has recently from London University calorimetry and 3d event display his Ph.D. joined the TPC Group. He received software. in 1982. His post-doctoral work his Ph.D. from the University of Richard is an avid squash was done at Rutherford Laborato- Illinois in 1975. Most recently he ries NIMROD accelerator and CERN player and an active promoter and spent six years at Indiana Univer- did research on xtp elas- player of "Ultimate Frisbee," the where he sity, the last four at SLAC as a at 2.5 GeV. A second Mark II collaborator at SLC. In that noontime, soccer-like game seen tic scattering post-doc at Rutherford brought on SLAC's campus green. collaboration he has helped imple- spec- Richard lives in Burlingame him to the CERN OMEGA ment the muon upgrade to the a central with his wife Debby and two cats. trometer where he played detector. We welcome him to SLAC. role in the readout electronics for Now as a physicist in the TPC one of the first large-scale Ring- Group, he will participate in the - Imaging Cherenkov Detectors. running and analysis of the exper- This spectrometer was used to iment and also pursue his interests EQ Flyer Available study charm photoproduction at in B physics by helping to develop 170 GeV. the proposal for a B Factory. In September several million color- Greg was invited to come to Arthur is married and has one ful Earthquake flyers were inserted SLAC as a Group B post-doc in daughter. We welcome him to the into all of the Sunday newspapers 1984 largely because of his experi- SLAC staff. in the Bay Area. ence with Cherenkov Ring Imag- Since many people at SLAC ing. He has now joined SLD as the didn't get one of these excellent czar of the high voltage and CRID brochures, the Environment and gas systems. Safety Office obtained copies for He is married to Bernadette, has everyone. They were recently sent a seven year old son, three cats, to "All Hands." At the same time, two tortoises, and numerous fish. a number of the Spanish and He has a vague recollection of ski- Chinese versions were also distrib- ing as a favorite pastime, but the uted.