|
The X-ray spectra and the structure of the atoms
"for his discoveries and research in the
field of X-ray spectroscopy"
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|
Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn |
| Sweden |
Uppsala
University
Uppsala, Sweden |
b. 1886
d. 1978 |
Biography
Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn was born on the 3rd of
December, 1886, at Örebro in Sweden. His father was Nils Reinhold Georg
Siegbahn, a stationmaster of the State Railways, and his mother was Emma
Sofia Mathilda Zetterberg.
After receiving a high-school education he entered the University of Lund
in 1906, where he obtained his doctor's degree, in 1911, on the thesis "Magnetische
Feldmessung". From 1907 to 1911 he served as Assistant to Professor J. R.
Rydberg in the Physics Institute of the University, afterwards he was
appointed lecturer and (in 1915) Deputy Professor of Physics. On the death
of Rydberg, he was appointed Professor (1920). In 1923 he became Professor
of Physics at the University of Uppsala. In 1937 came his appointment as
Research Professor of Experimental Physics, at the Royal Swedish Academy
of Sciences. When the Physics Department of the Nobel Institute of the
Academy came into being, that same year, Siegbahn was made its first
Director.
Siegbahn's early work (1908-1912) was concerned with problems of
electricity and magnetism.
From 1912 to 1937 his research work was mainly devoted to X-ray
spectroscopy. He developed new methods, and designed instruments for this
purpose. His improvements and new constructions of air pumps and X-ray
tubes enabled a considerable increase of the radiation intensity, and the
numerous spectrographs and crystal or linear gratings which he
constructed, have resulted in a highly increased accuracy of his
measurements. In this way, a large number of new series within the
characteristic X-radiations of elements could be discovered. The new
precision technique thus developer by Siegbahn led to a practically
complete knowledge of the energy and radiation conditions in the electron
shells of the atoms, while at the same I time a solid empirical foundation
was created for the quantum-theoretical interpretation of attendant
phenomena. Siegbahn's findings in this field havt been summarized by him
in his book Spektroskopie der Röntgenstrahlen, 1923 (rev. ed.,
1931; ed. in English, 1924), a classic in scientific literature. As a
measure of the high precision achieved by Siegbahn's spectrographs (which
are held at a constant temperature and read, in tenths of seconds, by
means of two microscopes mounted diametrically opposite one another on a
precision goniometer) may be mentioned the fact that his energy-level
values, arrived at thirty years ago, still serve for many purposes.
The research activity in the Institute under Siegbahn's leadership was
directed towards problems of nuclear physics. For this purpose a cyclotron
was constructed capable of accelerating deuterons of up to 5 to 6 MeV
(1939), which was soon to make place for a larger one for deuteron
energies of up to 30 MeV. In addition to this, a high-tension generator
for 400,000 volts was built, as a provisional measure, during the War
(transformed into a plant for 1.5 million volts in 1962). For the purpose
of studying the energy and radiation of the different radioactive isotopes
an electromagnetic separator has been constructed at the Institute, and
several new types of ß-spectrographs for various purposes have been
designed and built. With these technical resources, and after suitable
methods had been developed, a number of important projects for research
were taken up. The radiation processes of unstable atomic nuclei and
nuclear reactions of various kinds have been studied and exact
measurements made of the magnetic properties of atomic nuclei. Other
projects tackled by Siegbahn and his staff include the construction of an
electron microscope of a new pattern and an automatically working
ruling-engine for scratching well-defined gratings (with up to 1,800 lines
per mm), especially for X-rays and the extreme ultraviolet field. A large
number of young scientists, including many from foreign countries, have
taken part in the progressively developed research work to study the
atomic nucleus and its radioactive properties.
Siegbahn travelled a great deal and visited practically all important
centres of scientific activity in Europe (1908-1922), Canada and the
United States (1924-1925), where he, on invitation of the Rockefeller
Foundation, gave lectures at the Universities of Columbia, Yale, Harvard,
Cornell, Chicago, Berkeley, Pasadena, Montreal, and several other
universities. After World War II, he visited the main nuclear research
institutes in the U.S.A. during the years 1946 and 1953 (Berkeley,
Pasadena, Los Angeles, St. Louis, Chicago, M.I.T. Boston, Brookhaven,
Columbia, etc.).
As member of the Commission Internationale des Poids et Mesures (1937) he
took part in annual meetings of this Commission in Paris; he was elected
honorary member of this Commission when he left his membership ( 1956).
Siegbahn was President of the International Union of Physics, during the
period 1938-1947. Other honours, in addition to the Nobel Prize in Physics
(1924) awarded to Professor Siegbahn included the Hughes Medal (1934) and
the Rumford Medal (1940) from the Royal Society, London; the Duddel Medal
from the Physical Society, London (1948). He is honorary doctor in
Freiburg (1931), Bukarest (1942), Oslo (1946), Paris (1952) and the
Technical Faculty in Stockholm (1957). He is Member of the Royal Society,
London and Edinburgh, of the Academie des Sciences, Paris, and of several
other academies.
Professor Siegbahn married Karin Högbom in 1914. They have two sons: Bo
(b. 1915), at present (1964) Ambassador at Marocco; and
Kai
(b. 1918), since 1954 Professor of Physics at the University of Uppsala,
on the same Chair that his father held during 1923-1937.
From
Nobel Lectures,
Physics 1922-1941, Elsevier
Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
Lecture
The X-ray spectra and the structure of the atoms
Download
80 kb
Source:
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1924/index.html
CPH Stands
of: Creative Particle of Higgs that
propounded by Hossein Javadi in
1987
Biography

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Experimental Foundation of CPH Theory [PDF]
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Definition, Principle and Explanation of CPH Theory [PDF]
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Analysis of CPH Theory [PDF]
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Opinions on CPH Theory [PDF]
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Questions and Answers on CPH Theory [PDF]
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Realization Hawking - End of Physics by CPH [PDF]
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Maxwell's Equations in a Gravitational Field [PDF]
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Effective Nuclear Charge [PDF]
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Speed of Light and CPH Theory
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Sub-Quantum Chromodynamics [PDF]
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19, 2006:
Color Charge/Color Magnet and CPH [PDF]
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Apr. 17, 2006:
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