|
|
Patrick
Maynard Stuart Blackett was born on 18th November, 1897, the son of Arthur
Stuart Blackett. He was originally trained as a regular officer for the Navy (Osborne
Naval College, 1917; Dartmouth, 1912), and started his career as a naval cadet
(1914), taking part, during the First World War, in the battles of Falkland Islands
and Jutland. At the end of the war he resigned with the rank of Lieutenant, and
took up studies of physics under Lord Rutherford at Cambridge.
After
having taken his B.A. degree in 1921, he started research with cloud chambers
which resulted, in 1924, in the first photographs of the transmutation of nitrogen
into an oxygen isotope. During 1924-1925 he worked at Göttingen with James
Franck, after which he returned to Cambridge. In 1932, together with a young Italian
scientist, G.P.S. Occhialini, he designed the counter-controlled cloud chamber,
a brilliant invention by which they managed to make cosmic rays take their own
photographs. By this method the cloud chamber is brought into function only when
the impulses from two Geiger-Muller tubes, placed one above and one below the
vertical Wilson chamber, coincide as the result of the passing of an electrically
charged particle through both of them.
In the spring of 1933 they
not only confirmed Anderson's discovery of the positive electron, but also demonstrated
the existence of "showers" of positive and negative electrons, both in approximately
equal numbers. This fact and the knowledge that positive particles (positrons)
do not normally exist as normal constituents of matter on the earth, formed the
basis of their conception that gamma rays can transform into two material particles
(positrons and electrons), plus a certain amount of kinetic energy - a phenomenon
usually called pair production. The reverse process - a collision between
a positron and an electron in which both are transformed into gamma radiation,
so-called annihilation radiation - was also verified experimentally. In
the interpretation of these experiments Blackett and Occhialini were guided by
Dirac's theory of the electron.
Blackett became Professor at Birkback
College, London, in 1933, and there continued cosmic ray research work, hereby
collecting a cosmopolitan school of research workers. In 1937 he succeeded Sir
Lawrence Bragg at Manchester University, Bragg himself having succeeded Rutherford
there; his school of cosmic research work continued to develop, and since the
war the Manchester laboratory has extended its field of activity, particularly
into that of the radar investigation of meteor trails under Dr. Lovell.
At the start of World War II, Blackett joined the Instrument Section of
the Royal Aircraft Establishment. Early in 1940, he became Scientific Advisor
to Air Marshall Joubert at Coastal Command, and started the analytical study of
the anti U-boat war, building up a strong operational research group. In the same
year he became Director of Naval Operational Research at the Admiralty, and continued
the study of the anti U-boat war and other naval operations: later in 1940 he
was appointed Scientific Advisor to General Pile, C.M.C., Anti-Aircraft Command,
and built up an operational research group to study scientifically the various
aspects of Staff work. During the blitz he was also concerned with the employment
and use of anti-aircraft defence of England.
In 1945, at the end
of the Second World War, work was resumed on cosmic ray investigations in the
University of Manchester: in particular on the further study of cosmic ray particles
by the counter-controlled cloud chamber in a strong magnetic field, built and
used before the War. In 1947, Rochester and Butler, working in the laboratory,
discovered the first two of what is now known to be a large family of the so-called
strange particles. They identified one charged and one uncharged particle which
were intrinsically unstable and decayed with a lifetime of some 10-10
of a second into lighter particles. This result was confirmed a few years later
by Carl Anderson in Pasadena.
Soon after this discovery, the magnet
and cloud chamber were moved to the Pic du Midi Observatory in the Pyrenees in
order to take advantage of the greater intensity of cosmic ray particles at a
very high altitude. This move was rewarded almost immediately by the discovery
by Butler and coworkers, within a few hours of starting work, of a new and still
stranger strange particle, which was called the negative cascade hyperon. This
was a particle of more than protonic mass which decayed into a (p)-meson
and another unstable hyperon, also of more than protonic mass, which itself decayed
into a proton and (p)-meson.
In 1948 Blackett
followed up speculations about the isotropy of cosmic rays and began speculating
on the origin of the interstellar magnetic fields, and in so doing revived interest
in some 30-year old speculations of Schuster and H. A. Wilson, and others, on
the origin of the magnetic field of the earth and sun. Although these speculations
are not now considered as likely to be valid, they led him to interest in the
history of the earth's magnetic field, and so to the newly born subject of the
study of rock magnetism.
Professor Blackett was appointed Head of
the Physics Department of the Imperial College of Science and Technology, London,
in 1953 and retired in July, 1963. He is continuing at the Imperial College as
Professor of Physics and Pro-Rector.
Over the last ten years or so
a group under his direction have studied many aspects of the properties of rocks
with the object of finding out the precise history of the earth's magnetic field,
in magnitude and direction back to the earliest geological times. Such results,
together with those of workers in many other countries, seem to indicate that
the rock magnetism data supports strongly the conclusions of Wegener and Du Toit
that the continents have drifted relative to each other markedly in the course
of geological history.
The study is now being continued, directed
to explaining the remarkable phenomenon that about 50% of all rocks are reversely
magnetized. The experiments are directed towards deciding whether this reversed
magnetization is due to reversal of the earth's magnetic field or to a complicated
physical or chemical process occurring in the rocks.
Blackett was
awarded the Royal Medal by the Royal Society in 1940 and the American Medal for
Merit, for operational research work in connection with the U-boat campaign, in
1946. He is the author of Military and Political Consequences of Atomic Energy
(1948; revised edition 1949; American edition Fear, War, and the Bomb,
1949).
In 1924 he married Constanza Bayon; they have one son and
one daughter.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Patrick M.S. Blackett died on July 13, 1974.
|
|
| free web hits counter |
![]()
This is my BrainyGoose:
United States, IL, Chicago, English, Italian, Genry, Male, 21-25, bodybulding, swiming.
bravenet.com