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I
was born 1936 in Waltham, Massachusetts, the son of E. Bright Wilson Jr.
and Emily Buckingham Wilson. My father was on the faculty in the Chemistry
Department of Harvard University; my mother had one year of graduate work
in physics before her marriage. My grandfather on my mother's side was
a professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; my other grandfather was a lawyer, and one time Speaker of
the Tennessee House of Representatives.
My schooling took place in Wellesley, Woods Hole, Massachusetts (second,
third/fourth grades in two years), Shady Hill School in Cambridge, Mass.
(from fifth to eighth grade), ninth grade at the Magdalen College School
in Oxford, England, and tenth and twelfth grades (skipping the eleventh)
at the George School in eastern Pennsylvania. Before the year in England
I had read about mathematics and physics in books supplied by my father
and his friends. I learned the basic principle of calculus from Mathematics
and Imagination by Kasner and Newman, and went of to work through a calculus
text, until I got stuck in a chapter on involutes and evolutes. Around
this time I decided to become a physicist. Later (before entering college)
I remember working on symbolic logic with my father; he also tried, unsuccessfully,
to teach me group theory. I found high school dull. In 1952 I entered
Harvard. I majored in mathematics, but studied physics (both by intent),
participated in the Putnam Mathematics competition, and ran the mile for
the track team (and crosscountry as well). I began research, working summers
at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, especially for Arnold Arons
(then based at Amherst).
My graduate studies were carried out at the California Institute of Technology.
I spent two years in the Kellogg Laboratory of nuclear physics, gaining
experimental experience while taking theory courses; I then worked on
a thesis for Murray Gell-Mann. While at Cal Tech I talked a lot with Jon
Mathews, then a junior faculty member; he taught me how to use the Institute's
computer; we also went on hikes together. I spent a summer at the General
Atomic Company in San Diego working with Marshall Rosenbluth in plasma
physics. Another summer Donald Groom (then a fellow graduate student)
and I hiked the John Muir Trail in the Sierra Nevada from Yosemite Park
to Mt. Whitney. After my third year I went off to Harvard to be a Junior
Fellow while Gell-Mann went off to Paris. During the first year of the
fellowship I went back to Cal Tech for a few months to finish my thesis.
There was relatively little theoretical activity at Harvard at the time;
I went often to M.I.T. to use their computer and eat lunch with the M.
I. T. theory group, led by Francis Low.
In 1962 I went to CERN for a calendar year, first on my Junior Fellowship
and then as a Ford Foundation fellow. Mostly, I worked but I found time
to join Henry Kendall and James Bjorken on a climb of Mt. Blanc. I spent
January through August of 1963 touring Europe.
In September of 1963 I came to Cornell as an Assistant Professor. I received
tenure as an Associate Professor in 1965, became Full Professor in 1971
and the James A. Weeks Professor in 1974. I came to Cornell in response
to an unsolicited offer I received while at CERN; I accepted the offer
because Cornell was a good university, was out in the country and was
reputed to have a good folk dancing group, folk-dancing being a hobby
I had taken up as a graduate student.
I have remained at Cornell ever since, except for leaves and summer visits:
I spent the 1969 - 1970 academic year at the Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center, the spring of 1972 at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton,
the fall of 1976 at the California Institute of Technology as a Fairchild
Scholar, and the academic year 1979 - 80 at the IBM Zürich Laboratory.
In 1975 I met Alison Brown and in 1982 we were married. She works for
Cornell Computer Services. Together with Douglas Von Houweling, then Director
of Academic Computing and Geoffrey Chester of the Physics Department we
initiated a computing support project based on a Floating Point Systems
Array Processor. I helped write the initial Fortran Compiler for the Array
Processor. Since that time I have (aside from using the array processor
myself) been studying the role of large scale scientific computing in
science and technology and the organizational problems connected with
scientific computing. At the present time I am trying to win acceptance
for a program of support for scientific computing in universities from
industry and government.
I have benefitted enormously from the high quality and selfless cooperation
of researchers at Cornell, in the elementary particle group and in materials
research; for my research in the 1960's I was especially indebted to Michael
Fisher and Ben Widom.
One other hobby of mine has been playing the oboe but I have not kept
this up after 1969.
The home base for my research has been elementary particle theory, and
I have made several contributions to this subject: a short distance expansion
for operator products presented in an unpublished preprint in 1964 and
a published paper in 1969; a discussion of how the renormalization group
might apply to strong interactions, in which I discussed all possibilities
except the one (asymptotic freedom) now believed to be correct; the formulation
of the gauge theory in 1974 (discovered independently by Polyakov), and
the discovery that the strong coupling limit of the lattice theory exhibits
quark confinement. I am currently interested in trying to solve Quantum
Chromodynamics (the theory of quarks) using a combination of renormalization
group ideas and computer simulation.
I am also interested in trying to unlock the potential of the renormalization
group approach in other areas of classical and modern physics. I have
continued to work on statistical mechanics (specifically, the Monte Carlo
Renormalization Group, applied to the three dimensional Ising model) as
part of this effort.
(added in 1991):
Wilson became the Director of the Center for Theory and Simulation in
Science and Engineering (Cornell Theory Center) - one of five national
supercomputer centers created by the National Science Foundation in 1985.
In 1988, he moved to The Ohio State University's Department of Physics
where he became the Hazel C. Youngberg Trustees Distinguished Professor.
He is now heavily engaged in educational reform as a Co-Principal Investigator
on Ohio's Project Discovery, one of the National Science Foundation's
Statewide Systemic Initiatives.
He was elected to
the National Academy of Sciences in 1975, the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences in 1975, and the American Philosophical Society in 1984.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physics 1981-1990.
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