Maria Goeppert Mayer | |
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Born | Maria Göppert June 28, 1906 Kattowitz, German Empire (today Katowice, Poland) |
Died | February 20, 1972 San Diego, California, United States |
(aged 65)
Citizenship | Germany United States |
Fields | Physics |
Institutions |
Sarah Lawrence College Columbia University Los Alamos Laboratory Argonne National Laboratory University of California, San Diego University of Chicago |
Alma mater | University of Göttingen |
Doctoral advisor | Max Born |
Doctoral students | Robert G. Sachs |
Known for | Nuclear Shell Structure |
Notable awards | Nobel Prize in Physics (1963) |
Signature |
Maria Goeppert Mayer (June 28, 1906 – February 20, 1972) was a German-born American theoretical physicist, and Nobel laureate in Physics for proposing the nuclear shell model of the atomic nucleus. She was the second female Nobel laureate in physics, after Marie Curie.
A graduate of the University of Göttingen, Goeppert Mayer wrote her doctorate on the theory of possible two-photon absorption by atoms. At the time, the chances of experimentally verifying her thesis seemed remote, but the development of the laser permitted this. Today, the unit for the two-photon absorption cross section is named the Goeppert Mayer (GM) unit.
Maria Goeppert married Joseph Edward Mayer and moved to the United States, where he was an associate professor at Johns Hopkins University. Strict rules against nepotism prevented Johns Hopkins University from taking her on as a faculty member, but she was given a job as an assistant and published a landmark paper on double beta decay in 1935. In 1937, she moved to Columbia University, where she took an unpaid position. During World War II, she worked for the Manhattan Project at Columbia on isotope separation, and with Edward Teller at the Los Alamos Laboratory on the development of the Teller's "Super" bomb.