Scientist Solutions: Life Science Discussions
 Refer a Friend    Link To Us    Bookmark Us       

      
 » Home » The Lighter Side of Science » Anniversaries & Birthdays » Paul A. M. Dirac

Other Topics
11/21/2008 07:44 PM
Voltaire
11/19/2008 07:35 AM
George E. Palade
11/18/2008 09:53 PM
Zheng Zuoxin
11/17/2008 07:15 AM
Stanley Cohen
11/16/2008 08:57 PM
Maximilian von Frey
11/14/2008 11:37 PM
Frederick Grant Banting
11/13/2008 01:43 AM
Sálim Ali
11/9/2008 08:30 PM
Carl Sagan
11/8/2008 02:56 PM
Hermann Rorschach
11/7/2008 11:45 AM
Konrad Lorenz
11/5/2008 11:07 AM
Paul Sabatier
11/4/2008 09:42 AM
Frederick Orpen Bower
11/3/2008 08:24 AM
Jokichi Takamine
11/2/2008 07:24 AM
Melvin Schwartz
11/1/2008 10:27 AM
Sir Gavin de Beer
10/31/2008 06:01 PM
Adolf von Baeyer
10/30/2008 07:11 PM
Daniel Nathans
10/28/2008 09:33 AM
Jonas Salk
10/27/2008 07:09 AM
Matthew Baillie
10/24/2008 06:10 AM
Pierre-Gilles de Gennes
10/23/2008 06:11 AM
Felix Bloch
10/22/2008 07:23 AM
George Beadle
10/21/2008 04:47 PM
Alfred Nobel
10/20/2008 06:02 AM
Sir James Chadwick
10/20/2008 06:47 AM
Christiane Nüsslein-Volha ...
10/20/2008 12:59 AM
Christiane Nüsslein-Volha ...
10/15/2008 06:05 AM
Peter C. Doherty
10/13/2008 10:10 PM
Rudolf Virchow
10/12/2008 02:18 PM
Sir Arthur Harden
10/9/2008 06:07 AM
Emil Fischer
Subscribet to topic
Add Reply  Add New Topic  Add New Poll
bottom of page RSS Feed 

Topic Feed

 

Paul A. M. Dirac

 [View Printable]
cfish

Frog Laureate

See
Similar
Scientists





Group: Moderators
Posts: 531
Joined: Sep 21, 2006







 Send a personal messsage to cfish Reply with a quote from this post Go to the top of the page

Paul A. M. Dirac
Born 8 Aug 1902
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1933

Biography
Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac was born on 8th August, 1902, at Bristol, England, his father being Swiss and his mother English. He was educated at the Merchant Venturer's Secondary School, Bristol, then went on to Bristol University. Here, he studied electrical engineering, obtaining the B.Sc. (Engineering) degree in 1921. He then studied mathematics for two years at Bristol University, later going on to St.John's College, Cambridge, as a research student in mathematics. He received his Ph.D. degree in 1926. The following year he became a Fellow of St.John's College and, in 1932, Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge.

Dirac's work has been concerned with the mathematical and theoretical aspects of quantum mechanics. He began work on the new quantum mechanics as soon as it was introduced by Heisenberg in 1928 - independently producing a mathematical equivalent which consisted essentially of a noncommutative algebra for calculating atomic properties - and wrote a series of papers on the subject, published mainly in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, leading up to his relativistic theory of the electron (1928) and the theory of holes (1930). This latter theory required the existence of a positive particle having the same mass and charge as the known (negative) electron. This, the positron was discovered experimentally at a later date (1932) by C. D. Anderson, while its existence was likewise proved by Blackett and Occhialini (1933 ) in the phenomena of "pair production" and "annihilation".

The importance of Dirac's work lies essentially in his famous wave equation, which introduced special relativity into Schrödinger's equation. Taking into account the fact that, mathematically speaking, relativity theory and quantum theory are not only distinct from each other, but also oppose each other, Dirac's work could be considered a fruitful reconciliation between the two theories.

Dirac's publications include the books Quantum Theory of the Electron (1928) and The Principles of Quantum Mechanics (1930; 3rd ed. 1947).

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1930, being awarded the Society's Royal Medal and the Copley Medal. He was elected a member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences in 1961.

Dirac has travelled extensively and studied at various foreign universities, including Copenhagen, Göttingen, Leyden,Wisconsin, Michigan, and Princeton (in 1934, as Visiting Professor). In 1929,after having spent five months in America, he went round the world, visiting Japan together with Heisenberg, and then returned across Siberia.

In 1937 he married Margit Wigner, of Budapest.

From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965

This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.


Link: http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1933/dirac-bio.html

.........................

 Posted Aug 08, 2008, 11:56 AM
top of page Add Reply  Add New Topic  Add New Poll

Forum Jump