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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physics 1989
Norman F. Ramsey, Hans G. Dehmelt, Wolfgang Paul
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1989
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Norman F. Ramsey
Hans G. Dehmelt
Wolfgang Paul
Hans G. Dehmelt
Born: 9 September 1922, Görlitz, Germany
Affiliation at the time of the award: University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Prize motivation: "for the development of the ion trap technique"
Field: Atomic physics

Autobiography
My father, Georg, had studied law at
the Universität Berlin for some years, and in the first
World War had been an artillery officer. He was of a
philosophical bend of mind and a man of independent opinions. In
the depth of the depression he just managed to make a living in
real estate. When the family fortunes had shrunk to ownership of
a heavily mortgaged apartment building located in an
overwhelmingly Communist part of Berlin, it seemed reasonable to
move into one of the apartments ourselves as nobody paid any
rent. Cannons were deployed on the streets on occasion and the
class war had entered the class rooms. After a few bloody noses
administered by a burly repeater, I shifted my interests from
roaming the streets more towards playing with rudimentary radio
receivers and noisy and smelly experiments in my mother's
kitchen. In the spring of 1933 my mother, a very energetic lady,
saw to it that, at the age of ten, I entered the Gymnasium zum
Grauen Kloster, the oldest Latin school in Berlin, which counted
Bismarck amongst its Alumni. This involved a stiff entrance
examination and I was admitted on a scholarship. My father at
that time expressed the opinion that I probably would be happier
as a plumber. However, he apparently didn't quite believe this
himself. Thus, in years before, he had bought me an erector set
and books on the lives of famous inventors and Greek mythology,
and when I was ill he had given me the encyclopedia to read. I
supplemented the school curriculum with do-it-yourself radio
projects until I had hardly any time left for my class work. Only
tutoring from my father rescued me from disaster. Reading popular
radio books deepened my interest in physics. While physics was
taught at the Kloster only in the later grades, in the public
library I read books with titles such as "Umsturz im Weltbild der
Physik" and learned about the Balmer series and Bohr's energy
levels of the hydrogen atom. My teachers at the Kloster were
excellent, I remember in particular Dr. Richter, who taught Latin
and Greek, and Dr. Splettstoesser, who taught biology and
physics. Richter liked to expand on the classical works, which we
were reading in class. I spent most of the ample breaks in
related intense discussions with a group of classmates, Heppke,
Hubner, Landau and Leiser while others engaged in boxing matches.
Splettstoesser was a working scientist who spent Summers as a
visitor with a marine biology institute on the Adriatic. I jumped
a term and graduated in the spring of 1940.
Having received a notice from the draft board, I found it wise to
volunteer for the anti-aircraft artillery and a motorized unit. I
was not able to serve as a radio man but was assigned to a gun
crew and never rose above the rank of senior private. Sent to
relieve the German armies at Stalingrad, my battery was extremely
lucky to escape the encirclement. A few months later I was even
more lucky to be ordered back to Germany to study physics under
an army program at the Universität Breslau in 1943. After
one year of study, I was sent to the Western Front and captured
in the Battle of the Bulge. I spent a year in an American
prisoner of war camp in France and was released early in 1946.
Supporting myself with the repair and barter of prewar radios, I
took up my study of physics again at the Universität
Göttingen. Here I attended lectures by Pohl, Richard Becker,
Hans Kopfermann and Werner Heisenberg; Max v. Laue and Max Planck
attended the physics colloquia. At the funeral of Planck I was
chosen to be one of the pall bearers. At the university, I
greatly enjoyed repeating the Frank-Hertz experiment, the
Millikan oil drop, Zeemann effect, Hull's magnetron, Langmuir's
plasma tube and other classic modern physics experiments in an
excellent laboratory class run by Wolfgang Paul. In one of his
Electricity & Magnetism classes Becker drew a dot on the
blackboard and declared "Here is an electron..." Having heard in
another class that the wave function of an electron at rest
spreads out over all of space, and having read about ion trapping
in radio tubes in my teens set me to wonder how one might realize
Becker's localization feat in the laboratory. However, that had
to wait a while. In 1948, in Kopfermann's Institute, which was
heavily oriented towards hyperfine structure studies, I completed
an experimental Diplom-Arbeit (master's thesis) on a Thomson mass
spectrograph under Peter Brix. The results were published in "Die
photographischen Wirkungen mittelschneller Protonen II," the
first paper of which I was a (co)author. Soon thereafter, I began
work on my doctoral thesis under Hubert Kruger in the same
Institute. Well prepared by a series of excellent Institute
seminars on the NMR work of Bloch and of Purcell, we were able to
successfully compete with workers at Harvard University. In 1949
we discovered Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance and reported it in our
paper "Kernquadrupolfrequenzen in festem Dichloraethylen." My
doctoral thesis had the title "Kernquadrupolfrequenzen in
kristallinen Jodverbindungen." This work led to an invitation to
join Walter Gordy's well known microwave laboratory at Duke
University as postdoctoral associate.
At Duke I had the pleasure of making the acquaintance of James
Frank, Fritz London, Lothar Nordheim and Hertha Sponer. I advised
Hugh Robinson, a graduate student of Gordy's in an NQR
experiment, did my own research and also contributed some NMR
expertise to an experiment by Bill Fairbank and Gordy on spin
statistics in 3He/4He mixtures, gaining
some very useful low temperature experience in this brief
collaboration. Through Gordy's and Nordheim's good offices I was
able to receive a visiting assistant professor appointment at the
University of Washington with a charge to advise Edwin Uehling's
students during his sabbatical and to do independent research. I
had built my first electron impact tube during a brief interlude
in 1955 in George Volkoffs laboratory at the University of
British Columbia. Prior to that I had attempted a paramagnetic
resonance experiment on free atoms in Gottingen and succeeded in
doing so at Duke. During seminars at Göttingen on the
magnetic resonance techniques of Rabi and of Kastler, it had
occurred to me that because of the analogy between an atom and a
radio dipole antenna, (a), alignment of the atom should
show up in its optical absorption cross section, and (b),
electron impact should produce aligned excited atoms. I
put these two ideas to good use in 1956 in Seattle in an
experiment entitled "Paramagnetic Resonance Reorientation of
Atoms and Ions Aligned by Electron Impact." In this paper I first
pointed out the usefulness of ion trapping for high resolution
spectroscopy and mentioned the 1923 Kingdon trap as a
suitable device. This work also brought me into close contact
with spin exchange between electron and target atom, which gave
me the idea for my 1958 experiment "Spin Resonance of Free
Electrons Polarized by Exchange Collisions." However, first I had
to learn how to produce polarized atoms, which could then
transfer their orientation to trapped electrons. Falling back on
buffer gas techniques developed in my 1955 Duke paper "Atomic
Phosphorus Paramagnetic Resonance Experiment," I quickly
demonstrated in my 1956 Seattle paper "Slow Spin Relaxation of
Optically Polarized Sodium Atoms" how to efficiently produce and
monitor a polarized atom cloud. Trapping the electrons in a
neutralizing ion cloud slowly diffusing in the buffer gas, I was
able to carry out the spin resonance experiment. My optical
transmission monitoring scheme proved also very useful in the
development of rubidium vapor magnetometers and frequency
standards by Earl Bell and Arnold Bloom at Varian Associates, in
which I acted as a consultant. The rubidium frequency standard is
still the least expensive, smallest and most widely used
commercial atomic frequency standard. The thesis "Experimental
Upper Limit for the Permanent Electric Dipole Moment of
Rb85 by Optical Pumping Techniques" of my first
graduate student, Earl Ensberg, also made use of these novel
optical pumping schemes and was finished in 1962. These early
results were improved orders of magnitude by my doctoral student
Philip Ekstrom in his 1971 thesis "Search for Differential Linear
Stark Shift in Cs133 and Rb85 Using Atomic
Light Modulation Oscillators."
I was not satisfied with the plasma trapping scheme used for the
electrons and asked my student, Keith Jefferts, to study ion
trapping in an electron beam traversing a field free vacuum space
between two grids. Also, I began to focus on the
magnetron/Penning discharge geometry, which, in the Penning ion
gauge, had caught my interest already at Göttingen and at
Duke. In their 1955 cyclotron resonance work on photoelectrons in
vacuum Franken and Liebes had reported undesirable frequency
shifts caused by accidental electron trapping. Their analysis
made me realize that in a pure electric quadrupole field the
shift would not depend on the location of the electron in the
trap. This is an important advantage over many other traps that I
decided to exploit. A magnetron trap of this type had been
briefly discussed in J.R. Pierce's 1949 book, and I developed a
simple description of the axial, magnetron, and cyclotron motions
of an electron in it. With the help of the expert glassblower of
the Department, Jake Jonson, I built my first high vacuum
magnetron trap in 1959 and was soon able to trap electrons for
about 10 sec and to detect axial, magnetron and cyclotron
resonances. About the same time, my Göttinger colleague,
Otto Osberghaus, sent me a research report on the Paul rf ion
cage. This trap had very desirable properties for atomic ions and
it did not require a magnetic field. Therefore, I asked my
student, Fouad Major, to experiment with a simplified cylindrical
version of such a trap in the hope that it might be useful in hfs
resonance experiments on hydrogenic helium ions. The early
results were very encouraging and Jefferts also switched to the
Paul trap. In 1962, Jefferts and Major both finished their
Doctoral Theses entitled respectively "Alignment of Trapped
H2+ Molecular Ions by Selective
Photodissociation" and "The Orientation of Electrodynamically
Contained He4 Ions." As a continuation of the latter,
a new postdoc, Norval Fortson, Major and I published the 1966
paper "Ultrahigh Resolution DF=0
± 13He+ HFS Spectra by an Ion
Storage-Exchange Collision Technique." My own attempts to detect
the polarization of the electrons acquired from a polarized beam
of alkali atoms in my Penning (magnetron) trap, described in a
1961 research report to the NSF "Spin Resonance of Free
Electrons," were not so quickly successful. However in this work
I was much impressed by seeing the beam of sodium atoms
traversing my glass apparatus in the reflected light from a
sodium vapor street lamp adapted as illuminating light source.
Only a later concerted effort by Gräff and Werth at Bonn,
reinforced by Major and Fortson, as visitors, made a similar spin
resonance experiment work in 1968.
In the 1966 paper with Fortson and Major, I also proposed to
develop an infrared laser based on ions in an rf trap. To this
end my student, David Church, completed a thesis in 1969 entitled
"Storage and Radiative Cooling of Light Ion Gases in RF
Quadrupole Traps." In this work we demonstrated a
race-track-shaped trap and cooled the ions by coupling to a
resonant LC circuit. In parallel work my student, Stephan
Menasian, in 1968, with some help from G.R. Huggett, succeded in
cooling Hg+ ions in a race-track-trap with a helium
buffer gas and in detecting them by optical absorption. Jefferts'
research on hfs spectra of H2+ was
continued in Seattle by my postdoc Charles Richardson and later
by Menasian in his 1973 doctoral thesis "High Resolution Study of
the (1, 1/2, 1/2) - (1, 1/2,3/2) HFS Transition in
H2+." The resolution in the
3He+ hfs work was greatly enhanced in work
with my colleague Fortson and my postdoc Hans Schuessler.
Realizing in 1961 that precision measurements of the electron
magnetic moment would require a large magnetic field and that
Becker's electron localization feat might be approximated in a
Penning trap, I began to consider other avenues for magnetic
resonance experiments. Some success in the electron work,
achieved with the help of my new student, Fred Walls, was
described in our 1968 paper "'Bolometric' Technique for the RF
Spectroscopy of Stored Ions." I reviewed the work on ions and
electrons up to 1968 in two articles "Radiofrequency Spectroscopy
of Stored Ions."
The able assistance of two postdocs, David Wineland and my former
student Phil Ekstrom, made the isolation of a single electron
become a reality in 1973 with our paper "Monoelectron
Oscillator." Measuring its magnetic moment was another story. At
Göttingen in the late forties I had attended a seminar given
by Helmut Friedburg, a doctoral Student of Wolfgang Paul, on
focussing spins with a magnetic hexapole. This may be viewed as a
refinement of the Stern-Gerlach effect. In subsequent discussions
with fellow students a rumor of a Stern-Gerlach experiment for
electrons was brought up, and also Bohr's and Pauli's thesis that
such experiments were impossible in principle. Though it greatly
piqued my interest, I could not understand this thesis.
Stimulated by a 1927 paper of Brillouin on the subject, I
followed another of the guiding principles formulated by Bohr:
"In my Institute we take nothing absolutely serious, including
this statement." In 1973 I proposed, together with Ekstrom, to
monitor spin and cyclotron quantum numbers of the lone electron
by means of the "continuous Stern-Gerlach effect" in an abstract
"Proposed g-2/dvz
Experiment on Stored Single Electron or Positron." My new postdoc
Robert Van Dyck, Philip Ekstrom and myself reported the first
such experiment in our 1976 paper "Axial, Magnetron, and
Spin-Cyclotron Beat Frequencies Measured on Single Electron
Almost at Rest in Free Space (Geonium)." This work also already
made use of the important technique of side band cooling of the
electron. The demonstration of sideband cooling had eluded us in
earlier attempts undertaken together with Walls and later with
Wineland. Encouraged by the success of the monoelectron
oscillator I had also published in 1973 an abstract "Proposed
1014 Dv <
v Laser Fluorescence Spectroscopy on Tl+
Mono-Ion Oscillator." Unfortunately, this proposal infuriated one
of the agencies funding our research to the degree that they
terminated their support almost immediately. I was rescued by a
prize from the Humboldt Foundation and an invitation by Gisbert
zu Putlitz to initiate the proposed laser spectroscopy project in
his Institute at the Universität Heidelberg. As the fruit of
these efforts a paper "Localized visible Ba+ mono-ion
oscillator" by Neuhauser, Hohenstatt, Toschek and myself appeared
in 1980.
In 1981 Van Dyck, my doctoral student Paul Schwinberg and myself
extended the electron work to its antiparticle in our paper
"Preliminary Comparison of the Positron and Electron Spin
Anomalies" and I reviewed it in an article "Invariant Frequency
Ratios in Electron and Positron Geonium Spectra Yield Refined
Data on Electron Structure." In 1986 we published a detailed
paper "Electron Magnetic Moment from Geonium Spectra: Early
Experiments and Background Concepts" and in 1987 our
collaboration reported a 4 parts in 1012 resolution in
the g factor for electron and positron in "New High-Precision
Comparison of Electron and Positron g Factors." A very promising
scheme to detect cyclotron excitation through the small
relativistic mass increase accompanying it was published in a
1985 paper "Observation of Relativistic Bistable Hysteresis in
the Cyclotron Motion of a Single Electron" together with my
postdoc, Gerald Gabrielse, and William Kells, a visitor from
Fermi Lab.
Two years after the Heidelberg pioneering work an individual
magnesium ion was isolated in Seattle with my postdoc Warren
Nagourney and my student Gary Janik. The latter's thesis bore the
title "Laser Cooled Single Ion Spectroscopy of Magnesium and
Barium." "Shelved optical electron amplifier: Observation of
quantum jumps," was published in 1986 with my colleague
Nagourney, and Jon Sandberg, an exceptional undergraduate
assistant. The paper introduced a new technique which has made
optical spectroscopy on an individual ion possible with record
resolution and reproducibility. To date the best resolution has
been realized at NIST by a group headed by my former collaborator
Wineland. Peter Toschek who had made important contributions to
the visible ion work in Heidelberg has built up a thriving
laboratory for monoion-spectroscopy at the Universität
Hamburg. With Herbert Walther a collaboration almost came off in
1974. Walther, with his large staff and excellent facilities in
Munich, has since developed his own expertise in the field and
made outstanding contributions to it. Gabrielse, now a full
professor at Harvard, has assembled a large group and is trapping
and cooling antiprotons at CERN.
In the 1988 paper "A Single Atomic Particle Forever Floating at
Rest in Free Space: New Value for Electron Radius" I have
surveyed the field and suggested new avenues for its extension.
More precise measurements of the g factor of the electron may
well be the most promising approach to study its structure. No
less important, a trapped individual atomic ion may reveal itself
as a timekeeping element of unsurpassed reproducibility. The
research effort in Seattle continues on troth projects. The
National Science Foundation has supported my research since 1958
without interruption. Initially the Army Office of Ordnance
Research and the Office of Naval Research did also provide
support for many years.
I am married to Diana Dundore, a practising physician. I have a
grown son, Gerd, from an earlier marriage to Irmgard Lassow who
is deceased.
I do regular hatha yoga exercises, enjoy waltzing, hiking in the
foothills, reading, listening to classical music, and watching
ballet performances.
Selected Publications
"Die photographischen Wirkungen mittelschneller Protonen II", P.
Brix and H. Dehmelt, Z. Physik 126, 728 (1949)
"Kernquadrupolfrequenzen in festem Dichloraethylen", H. Dehmelt
and H. Krueger, Naturwissenschaften 37, 111 (1950)
"Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance", H. Dehmelt, Am. J. Phys. 22, 110
(1954)
Atomic Phosphorus Paramagnetic Resonance Experiment", H. Dehmelt,
Phys. Rev. 99,527 (1955)
"Paramagnetic Resonance Reorientation of Atoms and Ions Aligned
by Electron Impact" H. Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. 103, 1125 (1956)
"Slow Spin Relaxation of Optically Polarized Sodium Atoms", H.
Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. 105, 1487 (1957)
"Modulation of a Light Beam by Precessing Absorbing Atoms" H.
Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. 105, 1924 (1957)
"Spin Resonance of Free Electrons Polarized by Exchange
Collisions", H. Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. 109, 381 (1958)
"Spin Resonance of Free Electrons", H. Dehmelt, 1958-61 Progress
Report for NSF Grant NSF-G 5955
"Alignment of the H2+ Molecular Ion by
Selective Photodissociation", H. Dehmelt and K. Jefferts, Phys.
Rev. 125, 1318 (1962)
"Orientation of He Ions by Exchange Collisions with Cesium
Atoms", H. Dehmelt and F. Major, Phys. Rev. Lett. 8, 213
(1962)
"Ultrahigh Resolution DF=0, ±1
3He+ HFS Spectra by an Ion Storage -
Exchange Collision Technique", N. Fortson, F. Major and H.
Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. Lett. 16, 221 (1966)
"Radiofrequency Spectroscopy of Stored Ions", H. Dehmelt, Adv.
At. Mol. Phys. 3, 53 (1967) and 5, 109 (1969)
"Alignment of the H2+ Molecular Ion by
Selective Photodissociation II: Experiments on the RF Spectrum,"
Ch. Richardson, K. Jefferts and H. Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. 165, 80
(1968)
"'Bolometric' Technique for the RF Spectroscopy of Stored Ions",
H. Dehmelt and F. Walls, Phys. Rev. Lett. 21, 127 (1968)
"Radiative Cooling of an Electrodynamically Confined Proton Gas",
D. Church and H. Dehmelt, J. Appl. Phys. 40, 3421 (1969)
"Proposed g-2/dvz
Experiment on Stored Single Electron or Positron", H. Dehmelt and
P. Ekstrom, Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 18, 727 (1973)
"Monoelectron Oscillator", D. Wineland, P. Ekstrom and H.
Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. Lett. 31, 1279 (1973)
"Proposed 1014 Dv
< v Laser Fluorescence Spectroscopy on Tl+ Mono-Ion
Oscillator", H. Dehmelt, Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 18, 1521
(1973)
"Principles of the Stored Ion Calorimeter" D. Wineland and H.
Dehmelt, J. Appl. Phys. 46, 919 (1975)
"Proposed 1014 Dv
< v Laser Fluorescence Spectroscopy on Tl+ Mono-Ion
Oscillator II (spontaneous quantum jumps)", H. Dehmelt, Bull. Am.
Phys. Soc. 20, 60 (1975)
"Proposed 1014 Dv
< v Laser Fluorescence Spectroscopy on Tl+ Mono-Ion
Oscillator III (side band cooling)", D. Wineland and H. Dehmelt,
Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 20, 637 (1975)
"Axial, Magnetron, Cyclotron and Spin-Cyclotron Beat Frequencies
Measured on Single Electron Almost at Rest in Free Space
(Geonium)", Van Dyck, Jr., R.S., Ekstrom, P., and Dehmelt, H.,
Nature 262, 776 (1976)
"Entropy Reduction by Motional Side Band Excitation", Dehmelt,
H., Nature 262, 777 (1976)
"A Progress Report on the g-2 Resonance Experiments", H. Dehmelt,
in Atomic Musses and Fundamental Constants, Volume 5 (eds.
J. H. Sanders, and A. H. Wapstra), p. 499. Plenum New York,
1976
"Precise Measurement of Axial, Magnetron, Cyclotron and
Spin-Cyclotron Beat Frequencies on an Isolated 1-meV Electron",
Van Dyck, Jr., R.S., Ekstrom, P., and Dehmelt, H., Phys. Rev.
Lett. 38, 310 (1977)
"Electron Magnetic Moment from Geonium Spectra", Van Dyck, Jr.,
R.S., Schwinberg, P.B. & Dehmelt, H.G., in New Frontiers
in High Energy Physics (Eds. B. Kursunoglu, A. Perlmutter,
and L. Scott), Plenum New York, 1978
"Optical Sideband Cooling of Visible Atom Cloud Confined in
Parabolic Well", Neuhauser, W., Hohenstatt, M., Toschek, P.E.,
and Dehmelt, H.G., Phys. Rev. Lett. 41, 233 (1978)
"Single Elementary Particle at Rest in Free Space I-IV", Dehmelt,
H., Van Dyck, Jr., R.S., Schwinberg, P.B., Gabrielse, G., Bull.
Am. Phys. Soc. 24, 757 (1979)
"Localized visible Ba+ mono-ion oscillator",
Neuhauser, W., Hohenstatt, M., Toschek, P. E., and Dehmelt, H.
G., Phys. Rev. A22, 1137 (1980)
"Preliminary Comparison of the Positron and Electron Spin
Anomalies", P.B.Schwinberg, R.S. Van Dyck, Jr., and H.G. Dehmelt,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 47, 1679 (1981)
"Invariant Frequency Ratios in Electron and Positron Geonium
Spectra Yield Refined Data on Electron Structure", Hans Dehmelt,
in Atomic Physics 7, D. Kleppner & F. Pipkin Eds.,
Plenum, New York, 1981
"Mono-Ion Oscillator as Potential Ultimate Laser Frequency
Standard", Hans Dehmelt, IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation
& Measurement, IM-31, 83 (1982)
"Stored Ion Spectroscopy", Hans Dehmelt, in Advances in Laser
spectroscopy, F. T. Arecchi, F. Strumia & H. Walther,
Eds., Plenum, New York, 1983
"Geonium Spectra and the Finer Structure of the Electron", R. Van
Dyck, P. Schwinberg, G. Gabrielse & Hans Dehmelt, Bulletin of
Magnetic Resonance 4, 107 (1983)
"g-Factor of Electron Centered in Symmetric Cavity", Hans
Dehmelt, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 8037 (1984); Erratum
ibidem 82, 6366 (1985)
"Observation of Relativistic Bistable Hysteresis in the Cyclotron
Motion of a Single Electron", G. Gabrielse, H. Dehmelt & W.
Kells, Phys. Rev. Letters 54, 537 (1985).
"Doppler-Free Optical Spectroscopy on the Ba+ Mono-Ion
Oscillator", G. Janik, W. Nagourney, H. Dehmelt, J. Opt. Soc. Am.
B 2, 1251-1257 (1985)
"Single Atomic Particle at Rest in Free Space: New Value for
Electron Radius", Hans Dehmelt, Annales de Physique (Paris) 10,
777 - 795 (1985)
"Observation of Inhibited Spontaneous Emission", G. Gabrielse and
H. Dehmelt, Phys. Rev. Lett. 55, 67 (1985)
"Electron Magnetic Moment from Geonium Spectra: Early Experiments
and Background Concepts", Van Dyck, Jr., R.S., Schwinberg, P.B.
& Dehmelt, H.G., Phys. Rev. D 34, 722 (1986)
"Continuous Stern Gerlach Effect: Principle and idealized
apparatus", Hans Dehmelt, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83, 2291
(1986), and 83, 3074 (1986)
"Shelved optical electron amplifier: Observation of quantum
lumps", Warren Nagourney, Jon Sandberg, and Hans Dehmelt, Phys.
Rev. Letters 56, 2797 (1986)
"New High Precision Comparison of Electron/Positron g-Factors",
Van Dyck, Jr, R.S., Schwinberg, P.B. Dehmelt, H.G., Phys. Rev.
Letters 59, 26 (1987)
"Single Atomic Particle at Rest in Free Space: Shift-Free
Suppression of the Natural Line Width?", Hans Dehmelt, in
Laser Spectroscopy VIII, S. Svanberg and W. Persson
editors, 1987 (Springer, New York)
"Single Atomic Particle Forever Floating at Rest in Free Space:
New Value for Electron Radius", Hans Dehmelt, Physica Scripta
T22, 102 (1988)
"New Continuous Stern Gerlach Effect and a Hint of 'The'
Elementary Particle", Hans Dehmelt, Z. Phys. D 10, 127-134
(1988)
"Coherent Spectroscopy on a Single Atomic System at Rest in Free
Space III", Hans Dehmelt, in Frequency Standards and
Metrology, A. de Marchi Ed. (Springer, New York, 1989). p.
15
"Triton,.. electron,.. cosmon ...: An infinite regression? Hans
Dehmelt, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sri. USA 86, 8618-8619 (1989)
"Miniature Paul-Straubel ion trap with well-defined deep
potential well", Nan Yu, Hans Dehmelt, and Warren Nagourney,
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86, 5672 (I 989)
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1989, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1990
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1989
Addendum, May 2005
After I had received the Prize in 1989 until my retirement in October 2002 I continued my single electron and single ion work with my associates. In the 1990s, stimulated by the life extension work of Roy Walford I shifted my main effort more and more into this and the Health and Nutrition fields.
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| Hans Dehmelt |
On my University website http://faculty.washington.edu/dehmelt/ are some examples of work in progress. I also published 2 papers, Re-Adaptation Hypothesis: Explaining Health Benefits Of Caloric Restriction & Healthiest Diet Hypothesis: How to Cure Most Diseases? in the peer-reviewed journal Medical Hypotheses. Recently the Karolinska Institute invited me to nominate candidates for the 2005 Prize which I did. Also the journal Theoretical Biology and Medical Modeling asked me to publish my expanded next paper The Healthiest Diet: It Cures Most Diseases with them which I will do. My retirement from teaching was celebrated by a Fest & Festschrift An Isolated Atomic Particle at Rest in Free Space: A Tribute to Hans Dehmelt, Nobel Laureate, E. Norval Fortson and Ernest M. Henley, Editors.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 2005
MLA style: "Hans G. Dehmelt - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 24 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1989/dehmelt.html

