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I was born
in Paterson, New Jersey on March 16, 1918, the youngest of four children. My parents,
Israel and Gussie (Cohen), had met and married in New York City after emigrating
to the United States from the same small town in Russia. A paternal relative in
Russia, the Rabbi Isaac Jacob Reines (1839-1915), was famous for his role in founding
the Religious Zionist movement, Mizrachi. Manually very skilled and to some extent
a frustrated machinist, my father worked as a weaver before World War I, started
a silk mill business after the war, and eventually moved to Hillburn, New York,
where he ran a general store. My early childhood memories center around this typical
American country store and life in a small American town, including 4th of July
celebrations marked by fireworks and patriotic music played from a pavilion bandstand.
As a child, I enjoyed building things and participating in group singing in school.
Music, and singing in particular, was to become a central lifelong interest of
mine. The first stirrings of interest in science that I remember occurred during
a moment of boredom at religious school, when, looking out of the window at twilight
through a hand curled to simulate a telescope, I noticed something peculiar about
the light; it was the phenomenon of diffraction. That began for me a fascination
with light.
My early education was strongly influenced by my older
siblings. Our home had many books due principally to the educational interests
of my sister and two brothers, all of whom where serious students engaged in professional
studies; my sister became a doctor of medicine and my brothers became lawyers.
Among my activities was membership in the Boy Scouts; I rose each year through
the ranks, eventually achieving the rank of Eagle Scout and undertaking leadership
roles in the organization. My scientific interests also blossomed during this
time in the Boy Scouts, where I began to build crystal radios "from scratch."
By this time the family had returned to New Jersey, and I was a student at Union
Hill High School. In school, I was intitially more attracted to literary interests
and did not do as well in science studies. However, by my junior and senior years
in high school this situation turned around aufficiently to point me in the direction
of science. I was strongly encouraged by a science teacher who took an interest
in me and presented me with a key to the laboratory to allow me to work whenever
I wanted. I also served as Editor-in-Chief of the high school year book. In response
to the year book query to students about their principal ambition, my entry was:
"To be a physicist extraordinaire."
When time arrived to select a
college for study in science or engineering, I initially aimed to go to MIT, and
was accepted and advised to apply for a scholarship based on my grades. However,
I had a chance encounter with an admissions officer of Stevens Institute of Technology,
who so impressed me by his erudition and enthusiasm for the school that I changed
course and entered Stevens Institute. There, in addition to engineering studies,
I participated in the dramatic society and in a dance group performance. But the
college activity that I engaged in which was to have a long-standing attraction
to me was singing in the chorus, where I performed solo roles in major pieces,
including Händel's "Messiah". My voice and ear for music were sufficiently
highly regarded that I was encouraged by the leader of the chorus to take lessons
with a well-known voice coach at the Meatropolitan Opera. Since, as a student,
I could not afford to pay for lessons, they were eventually provided to me free
of charge. Between college and graduate school, I even thought briefly about pursuing
a professional singing career, but ultimately decided against it.
The interests in music and drama that I developed in college have persisted throughout
my life. Years later, while working in Los Alamos, I sang solos with the town
chorus and performed with the dramatic society; my dramatic roles included the
lead role in "Inherit the Wind." I also sang in performances of Gilbert and Sullivan
operettas in Los Alamos. My discovery of Gilbert and Sullivan had also occurred
while I was in college, and I have enjoyed occasionally entertaining colleagues
and friends with G & S lyrics. The peak of my musical endeavors occurred during
the period I lived in Cleveland, when I performed with the chorus of the Cleveland
Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Robert Shaw and orchestra conductor
George Szell.
I received my undergraduate degree in engineering in
1939 and a Master of Science degree in mathematical physics in 1941 at Steven
Institute of Technology. It was during this period in 1940, that I married Sylvia
Samuels. We have two children, Robert G., who currently lives in Ojo Sarco, New
Mexico, and Alisa K. Cowden, of Trumansburg, New York, and six grandchildren.
I continued with graduate studies at New York University, where I worked
for a time in experimental cosmic ray physics under the direction of S.A. Korff,
and wrote a theoretical Ph.D thesis on "The Liquid Drop Model for Nuclear Fission"
under R.D. Present. Even before completing my thesis in 1944, I was recruited
as a staff member under Richard Feynman in the Theoretical Division at the Los
Alamos Scientific Laboratory, to work on the Manhattan Project. During my participation
in the Manhattan Project and subsequent research at Los Alamos, encompassing a
period of fifteen years, I worked in the company of perhaps the greatest collection
of scientific talent the world has ever known. About a year after I arrived I
became a Group Leader in the Theoretical Division and, later, the director of
Operation Greenhouse, which consisted of a number of Atomic Energy Commission
experiments on Eniwetok atoll. In addition to my work on the results of bomb tests
conducted at Eniwetok, Bikini and the testing grounds in Nevada, I directed my
efforts during this period to the basic understanding of the effects of nuclear
blasts, including a study of the air blast wave coauthored with John von Neumann.
In 1958, I was a delegate to the Atoms for Peace conference in Geneva.
In 1951, I took a sabbatical-in-residence from my duties at Los Alamos to think
about the physics I would pursue in the coming years. It was during this time
that I decided to attempt the observation of the neutrino. The idea of searching
for the elusive neutrino had, in fact, occurred to me as early as 1947, but the
opportunity did not present itself. I was now detemined to do it, and formed an
extremely fruitful collaboration with Clyde Cowan, another Los Alamos staff member.
We initially considered the use of a nuclear bomb test as the source of neutrinos,
but soon decided that the reactor at Hanford, Washington, would be better. After
the first hints of a result at Hanford in 1953, we were informed by John Wheeler
about the new Savannah River reactor facility being built in South Carolina. The
conditions at Savannah River were ideal for this experiment and, in 1955, Cowan
and I transferred the operation there. In 1956 we observed the electron antineutrino.
Shortly after that, Cowan left Los Alamos and our collaboration came to a natural
end. I turned my attention for a while to gamma ray astronomy and soon began the
first in a continous series of experiments at the Savannah River site to study
the properties of the neutrino.
I left Los Alamos in 1959 to become
Professor and Head of the Department of Physics of the (then) Case Institute of
Technology in Cleveland, Ohio. During my seven years at Case, I built a group
working in reactor neutrino physics, double beta decay, electron lifetime studies,
searches for nucleon decay, and a very ambitious experiment in a gold mine in
South Africa that made the first observation of the neutrinos produced in the
atmosphere by cosmic rays. The primary goals of the experimental program were
elucidation of the properties of the neutrino and probing of the limits of fundamental
symmetry principles and conservation laws, such as the conservation of charge,
baryon number and lepton number. Most of these experiments required the reduction
of the cosmic ray muon flux in order to be successful, and the group necessarily
became expert in the operation of deep underground laboratories. The projects
also drew us into developing innovative detector techniques, including the use
of large liquid scintillator and water Cherenkov detectors.
This
line of research continued when I went, and brought my research group with me,
to the new University of California, Irvine campus in 1966 to become the founding
Dean of the School of Physical Sciences. I served as Dean until 1974, when I stepped
down to return to full time teaching and research. I was appointed Distinguished
Professor of Physics at UCI in 1987 and became Professor Emeritus in 1988. I have
also served as Professor of Radiological Siences in the College of Medicine at
UCI. The "Neutrino Group" at Irvine has been actively involved in a wide range
of neutrino and elementary particle physics experiments, including its role in
the IMB (Irvine-Michigan-Brookhaven) proton decay experiment. This group has continued
the program of reactor neutrino experiments, has been the first to observe double
beta decay in the laboratory, and was awarded the 1989 Bruno Rossi prize in High
Energy Astrophysics by the American Astronomical Society for its joint observation
(with the Kamiokande Experiment in Japan) of neutrinos from supernova 1987A. The
detection of the supernova neutrinos was a particularly gratifying outcome of
the IMB experiment. Our group had always been aware of the possibility of seeing
neutrinos from stellar collapse in our large detectors, and several of the previous
detectors had been adorned with signs identifying each of them as a "Supernova
Early Warning System."
Over the years, a number of other intriguing
experimental ideas and areas of investigation have been the objects of my attention,
and I have devoted some time and effort to exploring the inherent possbilities.
These include: the search for relic neutrinos; the"neutrino Mössbauer effect",
in which a photon is replaced by a neutrino; the measurement of the gravitational
constant, G, the most poorly measured non-nuclear fundamental constant by several
orders of magnitude; a spherical lens space telescope; attempting to set more
stringent limits on violation of the Pauli Exclusion Principle; exploration of
the brain using ultra-sound; and a variety of new detector ideas. These scientific
concepts, goals and challenges continue to excite and stimulate my interest.
| Honors and Awards |
| Sigma Xi, 1944 |
| TBp |
| Centennial Lecturer, University of Maryland, 1956 |
| Fellow of the American Physical Society, 1957 |
| Guggenheim Fellow, 1958-1959 |
| Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, 1959-1963 |
| Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1966 |
| Honorary Doctor of Science Degree, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, 1966 |
| Phi Beta Kappa, 1969 |
| Stevens Honor Award, 1971 |
| Distinguished Faculty Lecturer, University of California, Irvine, 1979 |
| Fellow, American Association Advancement of Science, 1979 |
| National Academy of Sciences, 1980 |
| J. Robert Oppenheimer Memorial Prize, 1981 |
| Honorary Doctor of Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, 1984 |
| Medal for Outstanding Research, University of California, Irvine, 1985 |
| National Medal of Science, 1985 |
| L.I. Schiff Memorial Lecturer, Stanford University, 1988 |
| Albert Einstein Memorial Lecturer, Israel Academy of the Sciences and Humanities, Jerusalem, 1988 |
| Bruno Rossi Prize, American Astronomical Society, 1989 |
| Michelson-Morley Award, 1990 |
| Goudsmidt Memorial Lecturer, 1990 |
| New York University Plaque, 1990 |
| Distinguished Alumnus Award, New York University, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, 1990 |
| W.K.H. Panofsky Prize, 1992 |
| The Franklin Medal, awarded by the Benjamin Franklin Institute Committee on Science and the Arts, 1992 |
| Foreign Member, Russian Academy of Sciences, 1994 |
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1995, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1996
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Frederick Reines died on August 26, 1998.
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