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Gell-Mann, Murray
Oral history interview with Murray Gell-Mann, 1997 July 17 and 18.
An interview in two sessions, July 1997, with Murray Gell-Mann, Robert Andrews Millikan Professor of Theoretical Physics, emeritus. Dr. Gell-Mann was on the faculty of Caltechs Division of Physics, Mathematics, and Astronomy from 1955 until 1993. In this anecdotal interview tracing his career to 1960, he begins by recalling his Manhattan childhood during the Depression, family background, early education at Columbia Grammar School. Discusses his undergraduate years at Yale, graduate work at MIT with Victor Weisskopf, courses at Harvard with Norman Ramsey and Julian Schwingerfollowed in 1951 by two terms at Institute for Advanced Study, working with Francis Low on a problem in quantum field theory. Summer 1951, University of Illinois, works on complex systems with Keith Brueckner; interaction with John von Neumann. Joins University of Chicagos Institute for Nuclear Studies, headed by Enrico Fermi; recalls such colleagues as M. L. Goldberger, Leo Szilard, Harold Urey, Gerald Wasserburg; works on dispersion relations and pseudoscalar meson theory with Goldberger. At University of Illinois, summer 1953, works with Low on elementary-particle field theory, invents the renormalization group; comments on later contributions of Petermann & Stueckelberg, his student Kenneth Wilson. His early work at Caltech on what was later called S-matrix theory; comments on contribution to superstring theory. Meets future wife, Margaret Dow; travels in Scotland with her, 1954; their marriage. Recruited to Caltech by R. P. Feynman; life in Pasadena; visits Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, summer 1955; Spain, France, and the U.K. Back at Caltech fall 1956, teaches quantum mechanics course. Recollections of Robert and Kitty Oppenheimer, Stewart Harrison. Comments on undergraduate education at Caltech and vain efforts to promote behavioral and social sciences there. Work at RAND, 1956; paper with Brueckner; objections by Brueckner and Tatsuro Sawada; contributions of Bill Karzas, Don DuBois, Jeffrey Goldstone. Annual Review of Nuclear Science article on last stand of the universal Fermi Interaction with Arthur Rosenfeld; related work by Marshak & Sudarshan; Feynmans approach; their collaboration; later work by Yang & Lee. Comments on origins of the Eightfold Way. Preoccupation with symmetry, supermultiplets, weak and strong interactions, Yang-Mills theory. Collaboration with Maurice Lv̌y et al., in France, 1959, on the axial vector current in beta decay.
(1929- ): American physicist who received the 1969 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles.
Brueckner, Keith A.
DuBois, Donald F.
Fermi, Enrico, 1901-1954
Feynman, Richard P. (Richard Phillips), 1918-1988
Gell-Mann, Murray
Goldberger, Marvin L.
Low, Francis E. (Francis Eugene), 1921-2007
Oppenheimer, J. Robert, 1904-1967
Ramsey, Norman, 1915-2011
Rosenfeld, Arthur H., 1926-2017
Schwinger, Julian, 1918-1994.
Szilard, Leo
Urey, Harold Clayton, 1893-1981
Von Neumann, John, 1903-1957
Wasserburg, Gerald J. (Gerald Joseph), 1927-
Weisskopf, Victor Frederick, 1908-2002
Wilson, Kenneth G. (Kenneth Geddes), 1936-2013-
California Institute of Technology
California Institute of Technology. Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy
Harvard University.
Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton, N.J.)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Niels Bohr institutet
Rand Corporation
University of Chicago. Institute for Nuclear Studies.
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Yale University.
Beta decay.
Mesons.
Quantum field theory
Quantum theory
Interviews. aat
Oral histories. aat
Transcripts. aat
Lippincott, Sarah Lee, interviewer.
AIP-ICOS
California Institute of Technology. Institute Archives. 1201 East California Blvd. (Mail Code 015A-74), Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
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