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John
Robert Schrieffer was born in Oak Park, Illinois on May 31, 1931, son
of John H. Schrieffer and his wife Louis (née Anderson). In 1940, the
family moved to Manhasset, New York and in 1947 to Eustis, Florida where
they became active in the citrus industry.
Following his graduation from Eustis High School in 1949, Schrieffer was
admitted to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where for two years
he majored in electrical engineering, then changed to physics in his junior
year. He completed a bachelor's thesis on the multiple structure in heavy
atoms under the direction of Professor John C. Slater. Following up on
an interest in solid state physics developed while at MIT, he began graduate
studies at the University of Illinois, where he immediately began research
with Professor John Bardeen. After working out a problem dealing with
electrical conduction on semiconductor surfaces, Schrieffer spent a year
in the laboratory, applying the theory to several surface problems. In
the third year of graduate studies, he joined Bardeen and
Cooper in developing
the theory of superconductivity, which constituted his doctoral dissertation.
He spent the academic year 1957-58 as a National Science Foundation fellow
at the University of Birmingham and the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen,
where he continued research in superconductivity. Following a year as
assistant professor at the University of Chicago, he returned to the University
of Illinois in 1959 as a faculty member. In 1960 he returned to the Bohr
Institute for a summer visit, during which he became engaged to Anne Grete
Thomsen whom he married at Christmas of that year.
In 1962 Schrieffer joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania
in Philadelphia, where in 1964 he was appointed Mary Amanda Wood Professor
in Physics. In 1980 he was appointed Professor at the University of California,
Santa Barbara and to the position of Chancellor Professor in 1984. He
served as Director of the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Santa Barbara
from 1984-89. In 1992 he was appointed University Professor at Florida
State University and Chief Scientist of the National High Magnetic Field
Laboratory.
He holds honorary
degrees from the Technische Hochschule, Munich and the Universities of
Geneva, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Cincinnati, Tel-Aviv, Alabama. In 1969
he was appointed by Cornell to a six-year term as a Andrew D. White Professor-at-Large.
He is a member of
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences
of which he is a member of their council, the American Philosophical Society,
the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters and the Academy of Sciences
of the USSR.
His awards include the Guggenheim Fellowship, Oliver E. Buckley Solid
State Physics Prize, Comstock Prize, National Academy of Science, the
Nobel Prize in Physics shared with John Bardeen and Leon N. Cooper in
1972, John Ericsson Medal, American Society of Swedish Engineers, University
of Illinois Alumni Achievement Award, and in 1984 the National Medal of
Science. The main thrust of his recent work has been in the area of high-temperature
superconductivity, strongly correlated electrons, and the dynamics of
electrons in strong magnetic fields.
The Schrieffers have
three children, Bolette, Paul, and Regina.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physics 1971-1980.
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