Robert Frederick Christy | |
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Robert Christy's wartime Los Alamos security badge
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Born | Robert Frederick Cohen May 14, 1916 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Died | October 3, 2012 Pasadena, California, United States |
(aged 96)
Citizenship | Canadian American |
Fields | Physics |
Institutions | |
Alma mater | |
Thesis | Cosmic-ray burst production and the spin of the mesotron (1941) |
Doctoral advisor | Robert Oppenheimer |
Known for | Christy pits |
Notable awards |
Eddington Medal (1967) Bronze Academic Medal of the Governor-General of Canada (1932) |
Signature |
Robert Frederick Christy (May 14, 1916 – October 3, 2012) was a Canadian-American theoretical physicist and later astrophysicist who was one of the last surviving people to have worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II. He was also briefly president of California Institute of Technology (Caltech).
A graduate of the University of British Columbia (UBC) in the 1930s where he studied physics, he followed George Volkoff, who was a year ahead of him, to the University of California, Berkeley, where he was accepted as a graduate student by Robert Oppenheimer, the leading theoretical physicist in the United States at that time. Christy received his doctorate in 1941 and joined the physics department of Illinois Institute of Technology.
In 1942 he joined the Manhattan Project at the University of Chicago, where he was recruited by Enrico Fermi to join the effort to build the first nuclear reactor, having been recommended as a theory resource by Oppenheimer. When Oppenheimer formed the Manhattan Project's Los Alamos Laboratory in 1943, Christy was one of the early recruits to join the Theory Group. Christy is generally credited with the insight that a solid sub-critical mass of plutonium could be explosively compressed into supercriticality, a great simplification of earlier concepts of implosion requiring hollow shells. For this insight the solid-core plutonium model is often referred to as the "Christy pit".