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Arno Allan Penzias
American physicist (1933–2024)
American physicist (1933–2024)
| Field | Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Arno Allan Penzias | |||
| image | 32. Tagung 1982 Physiker; Beim Studentenabend Arno A. Penzias - W134Nr.119142 - Willy Pragher (cropped).jpg | |||
| caption | Penzias in 1982 | |||
| birth_date | ||||
| birth_place | Munich, Bavaria, Germany | |||
| death_date | ||||
| death_place | San Francisco, California, US | |||
| citizenship | ||||
| field | Physics | |||
| work_institution | ||||
| doctoral_advisor | Charles H. Townes | |||
| thesis_title | A tunable maser radiometer and the measurement of 21 cm line emission from free hydrogen in the Pegasus I cluster of galaxies | |||
| thesis_year | 1962 | |||
| thesis_url | https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/35605851 | |||
| doctoral_students | Pierre Encrenaz | |||
| known_for | Cosmic microwave background radiation | |||
| prizes | ||||
| spouse | {{Plainlist | |||
| * {{marriage | Anne Barras | 1954 | end | div}} |
| children | 5 | |||
| education |
Arno Allan Penzias (; April 26, 1933 – January 22, 2024)
Early life, family and education
Penzias was born in Munich, Germany, the son of Justine (née Eisenreich) and Karl Penzias, who ran a leather business. His grandparents had come to Munich from Poland and were among the leaders of the Reichenbachstrasse synagogue. At age six, he and his brother Gunther were among the Jewish children evacuated to Britain as part of the Kindertransport rescue operation. Later, his parents also fled Nazi Germany, first for the UK, and then for the US, and the family settled in the Bronx, New York City, New York, in 1940. In 1946, Penzias became a US citizen.
After he graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School in 1951, he enrolled at the City College of New York to study chemistry, but he changed majors to physics and graduated in 1954, ranked near the top of his class. Penzias thereafter served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps as a radar officer for two years.
Career
Penzias' involvement with radar in the Signal Corps led to a research assistantship in the Columbia University Radiation Laboratory, which was then heavily involved in microwave physics. Penzias worked under Charles H. Townes, who later invented the maser.
Thereafter, at Bell Labs in Holmdel Township, New Jersey, he and Robert Woodrow Wilson worked on ultra-sensitive cryogenic microwave receivers, intended for radio astronomy observations. In 1964, on building their most sensitive antenna/receiver system, the pair encountered radio noise that they could not explain. It was far less energetic than the radiation given off by the Milky Way, and it was isotropic, so they assumed their instrument was subject to interference by terrestrial sources. They tried, and then rejected, the hypothesis that the radio noise emanated from New York City. An examination of the microwave horn antenna showed it was full of bat and pigeon droppings, which Penzias described as "white dielectric material". After the pair removed the dung buildup the noise remained. Having rejected all sources of interference, Penzias contacted Robert H. Dicke, who suggested it might be the background radiation predicted by some cosmological theories. The pair agreed with Dicke to publish side-by-side letters in the Astrophysical Journal, with Penzias and Wilson describing their observations and Dicke suggesting the interpretation as the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the radio remnant of the Big Bang. This proved to be landmark evidence for the Big Bang and provided substantial confirmation for predictions made by Ralph Asher Alpher, Robert Herman and George Gamow in the 1940s and 1950s.
Honors and awards
Penzias was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences in 1975. In 1977, Penzias and Wilson received the Henry Draper Medal of the National Academy of Sciences. He was also the recipient of The International Center in New York's Award of Excellence. In 1998, he was awarded the IRI Medal from the Industrial Research Institute.
On April 26, 2019, the Nürnberger Astronomische Gesellschaft e.V. (NAG) inaugurated the 3 m radio telescope at the Regiomontanus-Sternwarte, the public observatory of Nuremberg, and dedicated this instrument to Arno Penzias.
On September 11, 2023, the Radio Club of America said announced it had named an award, the Dr. Arno A. Penzias Award for Contributions to Basic Research in the Radio Sciences, to recognize his significant contributions to basic research involving radio frequency and related subjects. The club also announced that the first recipient of the award would be named in 2024.
Personal life
In 1954, Penzias married Anne Barras; the couple had three children, David, Mindy, and Laurie, before they divorced.
In 1996, he married Silicon Valley executive Sherry Levit, becoming stepfather to her son Carson and daughter Victoria.
Penzias died from complications of Alzheimer's disease at an assisted living facility in San Francisco, on January 22, 2024, at age 90.
Works
References
References
- "The Nobel Prize in Physics 1978". [[Nobel Foundation]].
- (1965). "A Measurement of Excess Antenna Temperature at 4080 Mc/s". [[Astrophysical Journal]].
- (1995). "Notable Twentieth-Century Scientists". [[Gale Research]].
- (7 May 2024). "Arno Allan Penzias (1933–2024): A visionary explorer of the Universe". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
- Neuman, Scott. (January 24, 2024). "Arno Penzias, co-discoverer of the Big Bang's afterglow, dies at age 90". [[NPR]].
- Hafner, Katie. (January 22, 2024). "Arno A. Penzias, 90, Dies; Nobel Physicist Confirmed Big Bang Theory". [[The New York Times]].
- Weil, Martin. (January 23, 2024). "Nobel laureate Arno Penzias dies at 90; helped find traces of Big Bang". [[The Washington Post]].
- "Arno Allan Penzias". IEEE.
- "Nobel-prize winning accidents". Institute of Physics.
- (1965). "A Measurement of Excess Antenna Temperature at 4080 Mc/s". [[Astrophysical Journal]].
- Lehrer, Jonah. (December 21, 2009). "The Neuroscience of Screwing Up".
- "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter P". [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]].
- "Arno A. Penzias". [[National Academy of Sciences]].
- "Henry Draper Medal". National Academy of Sciences.
- "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". [[American Academy of Achievement]].
- "Fachgruppe Radioastronomie {{!}} Einweihung des Radioteleskops: Ein Nobelpreisträger steht Pate und der Ministerpräsident gibt das Startsignal". Astronomische Gesellschaft in der Metropolregion Nürnberg (Astronomical Society of the Nuremberg Metropolitan Region).
- "RCA Announces 2023 Award and Fellow Recipients".
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