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Weiss, Rainer 1932-
Oral history interview with Rainer Weiss, 2020 June 7, 14, 21 & 28.
Interview with Rainer Weiss, professor emeritus of physics at MIT. Weiss recounts his family history in pre-war Europe and the circumstances of his parents' marriage. He describes his childhood in New York City, and he explains his interests in experimenting and tinkering from an early age. Weiss explains the circumstances leading to his undergraduate study at MIT and his original plan to study electrical engineering before focusing on physics. He recounts his long and deep relationship with Jerrold Zacharias, who singularly championed Weiss's interests over the years. He discusses his graduate work on the hyperfine structure of hydrogen fluoride. Weiss describes his formative work with Bob Dicke at Princeton, and he explains how technological advances was beginning to offer new advances in general relativity. He explains how Dicke's influence served as an intellectual underpinning for the creation and success of LIGO. Weiss emphasizes the importance of Richard Isaacson as one of the founding heroes of LIGO, and he describes the fundamental importance of joining his research institutionally with Caltech. He describes his early research with John Mather, and the numerous administrative challenges in working with the NSF throughout the LIGO endeavor. Weiss describes the geographical decisions that went into building LIGO, the various episodes when LIGO's ongoing viability was in doubt, and how both Barry Barish and Kip Thorne contributed to ensuring its success. At the end of the interview, Weiss describes some of the sensitivities regarding who has been recognized in LIGO and who has not, in light of all the attention conferred by the Nobel prize, and he reflects on how LIGO will continue to push discoveries forward on the nature and origins of the universe.
Rainer Weiss is a professor emeritus of physics at MIT. He completed his graduate studies at MIT. Weiss is a co-founder of the LIGO project and was a joint recipient of the Nobel Prize for his work on LIGO. He was also previously the Chair of the COBE Science Working Group.
Barish, B.C. (Barry Clark), 1936-
Dicke, Robert H. (Robert Henry)
Drever, R. W. P. (Ronald W. P.)
Isaacson, Richard A.
Mather, John R. (John Russell), 1923-2003
Thorne, Kip S.
Weiss, Rainer 1932-
Zacharias, Jerrold Reinach, 1905-1986
California Institute of Technology
Cosmic Background Explorer (Satellite)
Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory.
LIGO (Observatory)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
National Science Foundation (U.S.)
Princeton University
Tufts University.
Astrophysics
Black holes (Astronomy)
Cosmic background radiation
General relativity (Physics)
Gravitational waves.
Laser interferometers.
Interviews. aat
Oral histories. aat
Transcripts. aat
Zierler, David, 1979- interviewer.
AIP-ICOS
American Institute of Physics. Niels Bohr Library & Archives. One Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740, USA
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