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Maria
Goeppert Mayer was born on June 28, 1906, in Kattowitz, Upper Silesia, then
Germany, the only child of Friedrich Goeppert and his wife Maria, nee Wolff. On
her father's side, she is the seventh straight generation of university professors.
In 1910 her father went as Professor of Pediatrics to Göttingen where
she spent most of her life until marriage. She went to private and public schools
in Göttingen and had the great fortune to have very good teachers. It somehow
was never discussed, but taken for granted by her parents as well as by herself
that she would go to the University. Yet, at that time it was not trivially easy
for a woman to do so. In Göttingen there was only a privately endowed school
which prepared girls for the "abitur", the entrance examination for the university.
This school closed its doors during the inflation, but the teachers continued
to give instructions to the pupils. Maria Goeppert finally took the abitur examination
in Hannover, in 1924, being examined by teachers she had never seen in her life.
In the spring of 1924 she enrolled at the University at Göttingen,
with the intention of becoming a mathematician. But soon she found herself more
attracted to physics. This was the time when quantum mechanics was young and exciting.
Except for one term which she spent in Cambridge, England, where her greatest
profit was to learn English, her entire university career took place in Göttingen.
She is deeply indebted to Max Born, for his kind guidance of her scientific education.
She took her doctorate in 1930 in theoretical physics. There were three Nobel
Prize winners on the doctoral committee, Born, Franck and Windaus.
Shortly before she had met Joseph Edward Mayer, an American Rockefeller fellow
working with James Franck. In 1930 she went with him to the Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore. This was the time of the depression, and no university would think
of employing the wife of a professor. But she kept working, just for the fun of
doing physics.
Karl F. Herzfeld took an interest in her work, and
under his influence and that of her husband, she slowly developed into a chemical
physicist. She wrote various papers with Herzfeld and with her husband, and she
started to work on the color of organic molecules.
In 1939 they went
to Columbia. Dr. Goeppert Mayer taught one year at Sarah Lawrence College, but
she worked mainly at the S. A. M. Laboratory, on the separation of isotopes of
uranium, with Harold Urey as director. Urey usually assigned her not to the main
line of research of the laboratory, but to side issues, for instance, to the investigation
of the possibility of separating isotopes by photochemical reactions. This was
nice, clean physics although it did not help in the separation of isotopes.
In 1946 they went to Chicago. This was the first place where she was not
considered a nuisance, but greeted with open arms. She was suddenly a Professor
in the Physics Department and in the Institute for Nuclear Studies. She was also
employed by the Argonne National Laboratory with very little knowledge of Nuclear
Physics! It took her some time to find her way in this, for her, new field. But
in the atmosphere of Chicago, it was rather easy to learn nuclear physics. She
owes a great deal to very many discussions with Edward Teller, and in particular
with Enrico Fermi, who was always patient and helpful.
In 1948 she
started to work on the magic numbers, but it took her another year to find their
explanation, and several years to work out most of the consequences. The fact
that Haxel, Jensen and Suess, whom she had never met, gave the same explanation
at the same time helped to convince her that it was right. She met Jensen in 1950.
A few years later the competitors from both sides of the Atlantic decided to write
a book together.
In 1960 they came to La Jolla where Maria Goeppert
Mayer is a professor of physics. She is a member of the National Academy of Sciences
and a corresponding member of the Akademie der Wissenschaften in Heidelberg. She
has received honorary degrees of Doctor of Science from Russel Sage College, Mount
Holyoke College and Smith College.
They have two children, both born
in Baltimore, Maria Ann Wentzel, now in Ann Arbor, and a son, Peter Conrad, a
graduate student of economics in Berkeley.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
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.
Maria Goeppert-Mayer died on February 20, 1972.
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