PHYSICS: Frederick Reines 1995 - Los Alamos, NM
Posted by: tnwave
N 35° 52.922 W 106° 18.083
13S E 382532 N 3971645
Prize awarded for his discovery of neutrinos. After his death his family has allowed the award to be displayed in Los Alamos in the Hans Bethe house which now houses the Cold War Museum.
Waymark Code: WM116D2
Location: New Mexico, United States
Date Posted: 08/24/2019
Views: 3
Frederick Reines (1918-1998) was an American physicist.
Reines received his Ph.D. in physics in 1944 from New York University. Richard Feynman recruited Reines to join the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos. He worked in Feynman's T-4 (Diffusion Problems) Group, in Hans Bethe's Theoretical Division.
He stayed on at Los Alamos National Laboratory after the end of the war, becoming the head of the T-1 (Theory of Dragon) Group, which developed a machine to attain short bursts of criticality. He also participated in and wrote reports for several nuclear tests, including Operation Crossroads, Operation Sandstone, Operation Buster-Jangle, and others. In 1951, he directed the Operation Greenhouse nuclear tests in the Pacific. He later lobbied for underground nuclear testing, and was a member of the JASON advisory group.
In 1956, Reines and Clyde Cowan experimentally confirmed the existence of the neutrino. In 1995, they were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery. Reines was praised for being "so intimately associated with the discovery of an elementary particle and the subsequent thorough investigation of its fundamental properties."
Field of Accomplishment: Physics
Year of Award: 1995
Primary Relevant Web Site: [Web Link]
Secondary Relevant Web Site: Not listed
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