Everything about Philip Hauge Abelson totally explained
Philip Hauge Abelson (
April 27,
1913 –
August 1,
2004) was an
American physicist, editor of scientific literature, and science writer.
Philip Abelson was born in 1913 in
Tacoma, Washington. He attended
Washington State University where he received degrees in Chemistry and Physics, and the
University of California, Berkeley, where he earned his Ph. D. in Nuclear Physics. As a young physicist, he worked for
Ernest Lawrence at the University of California, Berkeley. He was among the first American scientists to verify
Nuclear Fission in an article submitted to the Physical Review in February of 1939
(External Link
). In addition, he collaborated with
Nobel Prize winner
Luis Alvarez in early nuclear research, and was the co-discoverer of the element
Neptunium on June 8, 1940 [with
Edwin McMillan, who was awarded the
Nobel Prize for the discovery].
He was a key contributor to the
Manhattan Project during
World War II. Although Abelson wasn't formally associated with the
atom bomb project, the Liquid Thermal
Diffusion isotope separation technique that he invented was used in the
S-50 plant in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and proved a critical step in creating sufficient fuel for the
weapon.
After the war, he turned his attention under the guidance of
Ross Gunn
to applying
nuclear power to
naval propulsion. While not written at an engineering-design level, he wrote the first physics report detailing how a
nuclear reactor could be installed in a
submarine, providing both
propulsion and
electrical power. His report anticipated the nuclear submarine's role as a
missile platform. This concept was later supported by
Admiral Hyman G. Rickover and others. Under Rickover's relentless leadership, concept became reality in the form of
USS Nautilus, the world's first nuclear-powered submarine.
From 1951 until 1971 he served as the director of the
Carnegie Institution of Washington's Geophysical Laboratory, and served as president of the Institution from 1971 to 1978. From 1962 to 1984 he was editor of
Science magazine, published by the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and served as its acting Executive Officer in 1974, 1975 and 1984. From 1972 until 1974 he served as President of the
American Geophysical Union (AGU).
During the 1970's he became interested in the problem of world energy supplies. Books on the topic include "Energy for Tomorrow" (1975), from a series of lectures at the University of Washington, and "Energy II: Use Conservation and Supply". He pointed out the possibilities of mining the Atabascan tar sands, as well as shale oil in the Colorado Rockies. In addition he urged conservation and a change of attitude towards public transit. .
Perhaps his most famous work from this time period is an editorial entitled "Enough of Pessimism" ("enough of pessimism, it only leads to paralysis and decay"). This became the title of a 100 essay collection.
After 1984, he remained associated with the magazine. Some have claimed him to be an early
skeptic of the case for
global warming on the basis of a lead editorial in the magazine dated
March 31,
1990 in which he wrote, "[I]f the global warming situation is analyzed applying the customary standards of scientific inquiry one must conclude that there has been more hype than solid fact." However, in 1977 in the foreword for a US National Research Council, Energy and Environment report he wrote, "What should the atmospheric carbon dioxide content be over the next century or two to achieve an optimum global climate?"
(External Link
), implying a level of connection between CO
2 and climate that would put him outside today's skeptic camp.
Dr. Abelson received many distinguished awards, including The President's
National Medal of Science, the
National Science Foundation's Distinguished Achievement Award, the
American Medical Association's
Scientific Achievement Award, the Distinguished Civilian Service Medal and the
Waldo E. Smith Medal in 1988. In 1992 he was awarded the
Public Welfare Medal, the
National Academy of Science's highest honor.
Dr. Abelson's wife
Neva Abelson (1910-2000) was a distinguished research physician who co-discovered the life-saving Rh blood factor test (with L.K. Diamond). Their daughter, Dr. Ellen Abelson Cherniavsky, now retired, worked as an aviation researcher at The
MITRE Corporation in
Virginia.
Philip Abelson died on
August 1,
2004 from respiratory complications following a brief illness.
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