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I
was born in Bad Kissingen (Franconia) in 1921. At that time my father,
Ludwig, was 45 years old. He was one of twelve children of a rural 'Viehhandler'
(small-time cattle dealer). Since the age of eighteen he had been cantor
and religious teacher for the little Jewish community, a job he still
held when he emigrated in 1938. He had been a bachelor until he returned
from four years of service in the German Army in the first World War.
My mother was born in Nuremberg to a hop merchant, and was fifteen years
the younger. Unusual for her time, she had the benefit of a college education
and supplemented the meagre income with English and French lessons, mostly
to the tourists which provided the economy of the spa. The childhood I
shared with my two brothers was simple; Germany was living through the
post-war depression.
Things took a dramatic turn when I was entering my teens. I remember Nazi
election propaganda posters showing a hateful Jewish face with crooked
nose, and the inscription "Die Juden sind unser Ungluck", as well as torchlight
parades of SA storm troops singing "Wenn's Juden Blut vom Messer fliesst,
dann geht's noch mal so gut". In 1933, the Nazis came to power and the
more systematic persecution of the Jews followed quickly. Laws were enacted
which excluded Jewish children from higher education in public schools.
When, in 1934, the American Jewish charities offered to find homes for
300 German refugee children, my father applied for my older brother and
myself. We were on the SS Washington, bound for New York, Christmas 1934.
I owe the deepest gratitude to Barnett Faroll, the owner of a grain brokerage
house on the Chicago Board of Trade, who took me into his house, parented
my high-school education, and made it possible also for my parents and
younger brother to come in 1938 and so to escape the holocaust. New Trier
Township High School on the well-to-do Chicago North Shore, enjoyed a
national reputation, and, with a swimming pool, athletic fields, cafeteria,
as well as excellent teachers, offered horizons unimaginable to the young
emigrant from a small German town.
The reunited family settled down in Chicago. We were helped to acquire
a small delicatessen store which was the basis of a very marginal income,
but we were used to a simple life, so this was no problem. I was able
to continue my education for two years at the Armour Institute of Technology
(now the Illinois Institute of Technology) where I studied chemical engineering.
I was a good student, but these were the hard times of the depression,
my scholarship came to an end, and it was necessary to work to supplement
the family income.
The experience of trying to find a job as a twenty-year-old boy without
connections was the most depressing I was ever to face. I tried to find
any job in a chemical laboratory: I would present myself, fill out forms,
and have the door closed hopelessly behind me. Finally through a benefactor
of my older brother, I was accepted to wash chemical apparatus in a pharmaceutical
laboratory, G.D. Searl and Co., at eighteen dollars a week. In the evenings
I studied chemistry at the University of Chicago, the weekends I helped
in the family store.
The next year, with the help of a scholarship from the University of Chicago,
I could again attend day classes, so that in 1942 I could finish an undergraduate
degree in chemistry.
On 7 December 1942, Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor.
I joined the Army and was sent to the MIT radiation laboratory after a
few months of introduction to electromagnetic wave theory in a special
course, given for Army personnel at the University of Chicago. My only
previous contact with physics had been the sophomore introductory course
at Armour. The radiation laboratory was engaged in the development of
radar bomb sights; I was assigned to the antenna group. Among the outstanding
physicists in the laboratory were Ed Purcell and
Julian Schwinger. The
two years there offered me the opportunity to take some basic courses
in physics.
After Germany surrendered in 1945, I spent some months on active duty
in the Army, but was released after the Japanese surrender, to continue
my studies at the University of Chicago. It was a wonderful atmosphere,
both between professors and students and also among the students. The
professors to whom I owe the greatest gratitude are
Enrico Fermi, W. Zachariasen,
Edward Teller and Gregor Wentzel. The courses of Fermi were gems of simplicity
and clarity and he made a great effort to help us become good physicists
also outside the regular class-room work, by arranging evening discussions
on a widespread series of topics, where he also showed us how to solve
problems. Fellow students included Yang, Lee, Goldberger, Rosenbluth,
Garwin, Chamberlain, Wolfenstein and Chew. There was a marvellous collaboration,
and I feel I learned as much from these fellow students as from the professors.
I would have preferred to do a theoretical thesis, but nothing within
reach of my capabilities seemed to offer itself. Fermi then asked me to
look into a problem raised in an experiment by Rossi and Sands on stopping
cosmic-ray muons. They did not find the expected number of decays. After
correcting for geometrical losses there was still a missing factor of
two, and I suggested to Sands that this might be due to the fact that
the decay electron had less energy than expected in the two-body decay,
and that one might test this experimentally. When this idea was not followed,
Fermi suggested that I do the experiment, instead of waiting for a theoretical
topic to surface. The cosmic-ray experiment required less than a year
from its conception to its conclusion, in the end of the summer of 1948.
It showed that the muon's is a three-body decay, probably into an electron
and two neutrinos, and helped lay the experimental foundation for the
concept of a universal weak interaction.
There followed an
interlude to try theory again at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton,
where Oppenheimer had become director. It was a frustrating year: I was
no match for Dyson and other young theoreticians assembled there. Towards
the end I managed to find a piece of work I could do, on the decay of
mesons via intermediate nucleons. I still remember how happy Oppenheimer
was to see me come up with something, at last.
In 1949, Gian Carlo
Wick, with whom I had done some work on the scattering of polarized neutrons
in magnetized iron while still a graduate student at Chicago University,
invited me to be his assistant at the University of California in Berkeley.
There the experimental possibilities in the Radiation Laboratory, created
by E.O. Lawrence, were so great that I reverted easily to my wild state,
that is experimentation. During the year there, I had the magnificent
opportunity of working on the just completed electron synchrotron of Ed
McMillan. It enabled me to do the first experiments on the photoproduction
of pions (with A.S. Bishop) to establish the existence of neutral pions
(with W.K.H. Panofsky and J. Stellar) as well as to measure the pion mean
life (with O. Chamberlain, R.F. Mozley and C. Weigand).
I survived only a
year in Berkeley, partly because I declined to sign the anticommunist
loyalty oath, and moved on to Columbia University in the summer of 1950.
At its Nevis Laboratory, Columbia had just completed a 380 MeV cyclotron;
this, for the first time, offered the possibility of experimenting with
beams of T mesons. In the next years I exploited these beams to determine
the spins and parities of charged and neutral pions, to measure the pi-
pi0 mass difference and to study the scattering of charged pions. This
work leaned heavily on the collaboration of Profs. D. Bodansky and A.M.
Sachs, as well as of several Ph.D. students: R. Durbin, H. Loar, P. Lindenfeld,
W. Chinowsky and S. Lokanathan.
These experiments all utilized small scintillator counters. In the early
fifties, the bubble-chamber technique was discovered by Don Glaser, and
in 1954 three graduate students, J. Leitner, N.P. Samios and M. Schwartz,
and myself began to study this technique which had not as yet been exploited
to do physics. Our first effort was a 10 cm diameter propane chamber.
We made one substantial contribution to the technique, that was the realization
of a fast recompression (within ~10 ms), so that the bubbles were recompressed
before they could grow large and move to the top. This permitted chamber
operation at a useful cycling rate. The first bubble-chamber paper to
be published was from our experiment at the newly built Brookhaven Cosmotron,
using a 15 cm propane chamber without magnetic field. It yielded a number
of results on the properties of the new unstable (strange) particles at
a previously unattainable level, and so dramatically demonstrated the
power of the new technique which was to dominate particle physics for
the next dozen years. Only a few months later we published our findings
on three events of the type Sigma0-> Delta0 + gamma, which demonstrated
the existence of the Sigma0 hyperon and gave a measure of its mass. This
experiment used a new propane chamber, eight times larger in volume, and
with a magnetic field. This chamber also introduced the use of more than
two stereo cameras, a development which is crucial for the rapid, computerized
analysis of events, and has been incorporated into all subsequent bubble
chambers.
In the decade which followed, the same collaborators, together with Profs.
Plano, Baltay, Franzini, Colley and Prodell, and a number of new students,
constructed three more bubble chambers: a 12" H2 chamber as well as 30"
propane and H2 chambers, developed the analysis techniques, and performed
a series of experiments to clarify the properties of the new particles.
The experiments I remember with the most pleasure are:
- the demonstration
of parity violation in D decay, 1957;
- the demonstration of the decay of the pion, 1958; - the determination
of the parity on the basis of angular correlation in the double internal
conversion of the g rays, 1962;
- the determination of the w and j decay widths (lifetimes), 1962;
- the determination of the S0 - D0 relative parity, 1963;
- the demonstration of the validity of the DS = DQ rule in K0 and in hyperon
decays, 1964.
This long chain of bubble-chamber experiments, in which I also enjoyed
and appreciated the collaboration of two Italian groups, the Bologna group
of G. Puppi and the Pisa group of M. Conversi, was interrupted in 1961,
in order to perform, at the suggestion of Mel Schwartz, and with G. Danby,
J.M. Gaillard, D. Goulianos, L. Lederman and N. Mistri, the first experiment
using a high-energy neutrino beam now recognized by the Nobel Prize, and
described in the paper of M. Schwartz.
In 1964, CP violation was discovered by Christensen, Cronin, Fitch and
Turlay. Soon after I found myself on sabbatical leave at CERN, and proposed,
together with Rubbia and others, to look for the interference between
K0s and K0L amplitudes in the time dependence of K0 decay. Such interference
was expected in the CP violation explanation of the results of Christensen
et al., but not in other explanations which had also been proposed. The
experiment was successful, and marked the beginning of a set of experiments
to learn more about CP violation, which was to last a decade. The next
result was the observation of the small, CP-violating, charge asymmetry
in K0L leptonic decay, in 1966. Measurement of the time dependence of
this charge asymmetry, following a regenerator, permitted a determination
of the regeneration phase; this, together with the earlier interference
experiments, yielded, for the first time, the CP-violating phase jh+ -
and, in consequence, as well as the observed magnitudes of the CP-violating
amplitudes in the two-pion and the leptonic decays, certain checks of
the superweak model. The same experiment also gave a more sensitive check
of the DS = DQ rule, an ingredient of the present Standard Model.
In 1968, I joined CERN. Charpak had just invented proportional wire chambers,
and this development offered a much more powerful way to study the K0
decay to which I had become addicted. Two identical detectors were constructed,
one at CERN together with Filthuth, Kleinknecht, Wahl, and others, and
one at Columbia together with Christensen, Nygren, Carithers and students.
The Columbia beam was long, and therefore contained no Ks but only KL,
the CERN beam was short, and therefore contained a mixture of Ks and KL.
It was contaminated by a large flux of L0, and so was also a hyperon beam,
permitting the first measurements of L0 cross-sections as well as the
Coulomb excitation of L0 to S0, a difficult and interesting experiment
carried out chicfly by Steffen and Dydak. The most important result to
come from the Columbia experiment was the observation of the rare decay
KL -> µ+µ- with a branching ratio compatible with theoretical predictions
based on unitarity. Previously, a Berkeley experiment had searched in
vain for this decay and had claimed an upper limit in violation of unitarity.
Since unitarity is fundamental to field theory, this result had a certain
importance.
The CERN experiment,
which extended until 1976, produced a series of precise measurements on
the interference of Ks and KL in the two-pion and leptonic decay modes,
thus leading us to obtain highly precise results on the CP-violating parameters
in K0 decay. I believe the experiment was beautiful, and take some pride
in it, but the results were all in agreement with the superweak model
and so did little towards understanding the origin of CP violation.
In 1972, the K0 collaboration
of CERN, Dortmund and Heidelberg was joined by a group from Saclay, under
R. Turlay, to study the possibilities for a neutrino experiment at the
CERN SPS then under construction. The CDHS detector, a modular array of
magnetized iron disks, scintillation counters and drift chambers, 3.75
m in diameter, 20 m long, and weighing 1200 t, was designed, constructed,
and exposed to different neutrino beams at the SPS during the period 1977
to 1983. It provided a large body of data on the charged-current and neutral-current
inclusive reactions in iron, which permitted first of all the clearing
away of a number of incorrect results, e.g. the "high-y anomaly" produced
at Fermilab, allowed the first precise and correct determination of the
Weinberg angle, demonstrated the existence of right-handed neutral currents,
provided measurements of the structure functions which gave quantitative
support to the quark constituent model of the nucleon, and, through the
Q2 evolution of the structure functions, gave quantitative support to
QCD. The study of multimuon events gave quantitative support to the GIM
model of the Cabibbo current through its predictions on charm production.
In the CDHS experiment we were about thirty physicists. Since 1983, I
have been spokesman for a collaboration of 400 physicists engaged in the
design and construction of a detector for the 100 + 100 GeV e+e- Collider,
LEP, to be ready at CERN in the beginning of 1989. In the meantime I had
also helped to design an experiment to compare CP violation in the charged
and neutral two-pion decay of the K0L. This experiment was the first to
show "direct" CP violation, an important step towards the understanding
of CP violation.
In 1986, I retired
from CERN and became part-time Professor at the Scuola Normale Superiore
in Pisa. However, my chief activity continues as before in my research
at CERN.
I am married to
Cynthia Alff, my former student and now biologist, and we have two marvellous
children, Julia, 14 years old, and John, 11 years old. From an earlier
marriage to Joan Beauregard, there are two fine sons, Joseph Ludwig and
Richard Ned.
I play the flute,
unfortunately not very well, and have enjoyed tennis, mountaineering and
sailing, passionately.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physics 1981-1990.
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