|
1901 2012
Prize category:
|
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1995
Martin L. Perl, Frederick Reines
Martin L. Perl
Born: 24 June 1927, New York, NY, USA
Affiliation at the time of the award: Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
Prize motivation: "for the discovery of the tau lepton"
Field: Particle physics

Autobiography
Good Schools, Books, a Love of Mechanics, and You
Must Earn a Living
About 1900 my parents came to the United States as children from
what was then the Polish area of Russia. As Jews, their families
left Russia to escape the poverty and the antisemitism. My parents
grew up in poor areas of New York City, my father Oscar Perl in
the East Side district of Manhattan and my mother Fay Rosenthal
in the Brownsville district of Brooklyn. Their educations ended
with high school - my father going to work as a clerk and then salesman
in a company dealing in printing and stationary, and my mother working
as a secretary and then bookkeeper in a firm of wool merchants.
My parents were determined to move into the middle class. By the
time my sister, Lila Perl, and I were born in the 1920's, my father
had established a printing and advertising company called Allied
Printing. For many years, Allied Printing was a precarious business.
I remember conversations at the dinner table about the problem of
meeting the upcoming Friday payroll. However, Allied Printing brought
the four of us into the middle class and kept us in the middle class
thru the Depression of the 1930's. We lived in the better neighborhoods
of the borough of Brooklyn, not the fanciest neighborhoods, but
quite good neighborhoods, and so we went to quite good schools.
These schools and the attitude of my parents towards these schools
were important in preparing me for the work of an experimental scientist.
Going to school and working for good marks, indeed working for very
good marks, was a serious business. My parents regarded school teachers
as higher beings, as did many immigrants. School principals were
gods to be worshiped but never seen by children or parents. Parents
never visited the school to talk about the curriculum or to meet
with their child's teacher. A parent being called to the school
because their child had misbehaved was as serious as a parent being
called to the police station because their child had robbed a bank.
The remoteness of my parents from the schools, so unfashionable
today, was often painful for me, but I learned early to deal with
an outside and sometimes hard world. Good training for research
work! The experimenter dealing with nature faces an outside and
often hard world. Natures' curriculum cannot be changed.
The curricula were unsophisticated, with a great deal of time wasted
on penmanship and geography in the early grades and repetitions
of the trivial history of New York City in higher grades. But there
were also serious courses. In my high school, two foreign languages
had to be studied, four years of English was required, and that
meant mostly grammar and composition. I was able to take four years
of mathematics and a year of physics. Whatever the course, whether
the course was boring or interesting to me, whether I was talented
in mathematics or not talented in languages, my parents expected
A's. This was good training for research, because large parts of
experimental work are sometimes boring or involve the use of skills
in which one is not particularly gifted.
For example, I am not a good craftsman. Until recently when I could
use computer-based drafting programs, my drawings always looked
messy, with uneven lines and ragged lettering. I could never get
an "A" in drafting in college. Yet drawing the apparatus to be built
for my experiments has always been a crucial part of my experimental
work.
There was compensation for the unsophisticated curriculum; with
good marks one could "skip" school years. The normal progression
was to begin the eight years of elementary school at six years of
age, and then to take four years of high school, leading to graduation
at eighteen. But classrooms were crowded, and there were no worries
about the proper social level of a student; a good student could
skip a year or more in elementary school. I was sixteen when I graduated
from James Madison High School in Brooklyn in 1942. My sister, who
is now a well known writer in the United States, moved through school
even faster - she graduated at fifteen and one-half.
Along with my parents insistence, soon internalized, that I do very
well in school, went my love of reading and my love of mechanics.
I read everything: fiction, history, science, mathematics, biography,
travel. There were two free public libraries within walking distance
of my home; I remember taking six books home from every visit, the
limit set by the library. This reading had only partial approval
from my parents. They wanted me to play more sports because they
were acutely sensitive to their children being one hundred percent
American, and they believed that all Americans played sports and
loved sports. They felt that too much reading interfered with my
going outside to play sport. I loved rainy days when I did not have
to go outside, and to the present I still feel very content on a
rainy day.
Two books are burned in my memory, Lancelot Hogben's Mathematics
for the Millions and his Science for the Citizen. I borrowed them
from the library again and again. I made summaries of them. I could
not understand Hogben's introduction to calculus so I copied that
section completely. I don't know why it never occurred to me or
my parents to buy the books. We could have well-afforded them, but
somehow buying books was a waste of money. Naturally, I have compensated
in my adult years by owning very large numbers of books.
Another thing we could have afforded was to buy me an Erector construction
set. The Erector construction set was the United States equivalent
of Meccano or Märklin construction sets in England and Europe.
But the cousin I played with every Saturday had an Erector set,
and one Erector set per extended family was considered quite enough.
He also had electric trains. I loved to build with the Erector set,
I loved to build toys and models out of wood, I loved to draw mechanical
devices, even those I could not build. I loved to read the magazines,
Popular Mechanics and Popular Science. I loved all
things mechanical; cars, trucks, derricks trains, and steam ships.
I was in love with mechanics, and I still am.
Before leaving this subject I must mention that since I never owned
an Erector set as a child, I have compensated in my adult years
by collecting old European, English, and American construction sets;
and even by devising and starting prototype production of a modern
wooden construction set called BIG-NUT.
I was also interested in chemistry, but my parents were not willing
to buy me a chemistry set. I had some chemicals but when I bought
sulfuric acid and nitric acid, my father confiscated the acids on
the grounds of safety. As every child knows, chemistry with nothing
stronger than vinegar soon becomes dull. Strangely for a person
who became a physicist, I was not interested in amateur radio or
in building radios. I don't know why. This was the 1930's when vacuum
tubes and variable condensers made radio building quite mechanical.
In spite of very good school marks, a love of books (particularly
in science and mathematics), and a great love of mechanics, I never
thought of becoming a scientist. That was because as the children
of immigrants, my sister and I were taught that we must use our
education to "earn a good living" In fact, we didn't have to be
taught that. It was obvious to us. Our home life was physically
comfortable, and in some ways emotionally supportive, but it was
also rigid and stifling. We knew that we had to earn our own livings
to escape from home and Brooklyn. A good living in the Jewish middle
class meant that a girl should become a teacher or nurse; a boy
should become a doctor, dentist, lawyer, or accountant. I did not
think about going into business because the difficulties of the
Depression years did not make business a good way to earn a living.
Although I won the physics medal when I graduated from high school,
I did not think of becoming a physicist or any kind of scientist.
My parents and I knew about a few scientists, certainly Pasteur,
and perhaps Einstein, but we did not know that it was possible for
a man to earn a living as a scientist.
Engineering Studies, the War, a Practicin
Engineer, and What You are Interested in is called Physics
We did know that a man could earn a living as engineer. And so in
choosing a profession for me, my parents and I took into account
my love of mechanics, and science and mathematics. We put aside
my becoming a doctor, dentist, lawyer, or accountant in favor of
my becoming an engineer. This was an unusual choice for a Jewish
boy in the early 1940's because there was still plenty of antisemitism
in engineering companies. I enrolled in the Polytechnic Institute
of Brooklyn, now Polytechnic University, and began
studying chemical engineering.
There were several reasons for choosing chemical engineering.
Chemistry was a very exciting field in the late 1930's and early
1940's. Chemistry was bringing to our lives synthetic materials
such as nylon. The slogan of the radio program, Dupont's
Cavalcade of America, was "Better things for better living
through chemistry". Furthermore, Allied Printing had prospered
through my father's hard work, and through the inclusion of a few
chemical companies among his customers. He became friends with
buyers in several of these companies, and they told him about the
expansion of their companies. There would always be a good job in
chemical engineering.
One of the first courses I took in college was general physics,
using the textbook by Hausman and Slack. The course was all about
pulleys and thermometers; physics seemed a dead field compared to
chemistry. So, just as I was blind to the fascination of physics
in high school, I was once again blind to its fascination in
college. I ignored physics, and continued studying chemistry and
chemical engineering.
My studies were interrupted by the war. I wanted to join the
United States Army, but I was not yet eighteen and my parents
would not give me permission. However, they agreed to me joining
the United States Merchant Marine, I was allowed to leave college
and become an engineering cadet in the program at the Kings Point
Merchant Marine Academy. The training ship was wonderful - it had
a main reciprocating steam engine, and direct steam driven pumps
and auxiliary machinery; a paradise of mechanics. But when I went
to sea for six months as part of the training, I was on a Victory
ship with a sealed turbine and electrically driven auxiliary
machinery. Very boring. Therefore, when the war ended with the
atom bomb, I left the merchant marine and went to work for my
father while waiting to return to college. I knew so little about
physics that I didn't know even vaguely why the bomb was so
powerful.
I didn't get right back to college. The draft was still in force
in the United States. I was drafted, and spent a pleasant year at
an army installation in Washington, DC, doing very little.
Finally, I returned to the Polytechnic Institute and received a
summa cum laude bachelor degree in Chemical Engineering in
1948.
The skills and knowledge I acquired at the Polytechlnic Institute
have been crucial in all my experimental work: the use of
strength of materials principles in equipment design, machine
shop practice, engineering drawing, practical fluid mechanics,
inorganic and organic chemistry, chemical laboratory techniques,
manufacturing processes, metallurgy, basic concepts in mechanical
engineering, basic concepts in electrical engineering,
dimensional analysis, speed and power in mental arithmetic,
numerical estimation (crucial when depending on a slide rule for
calculations), and much more.
Upon graduation, I joined the General Electric Company. After a
year in an advanced engineering training program, I settled in
Schenectady, New York, working as a Chemical Engineer in the
Electron Tube Division. I worked in an engineering office in the
electron tube production factory. Our job was to troubleshoot
production problems, to improve production processes, and
occasionally to do a little development work. We were not a fancy
R&D office. I worked on speeding-up the production of
television picture tubes, and then on problems of grid emission
in industrial power tubes. These tasks led to a turning point in
my life.
I had to learn a little about how electron vacuum tubes worked,
so I took a few courses in Union College in Schenectady
specifically, atomic physics and advanced calculus. I got to know
a wonderful physics professor, Vladimir Rojansky. One day he said
to me "Martin, what you are interested in is called physics not
chemistry!" At the age of 23, I finally decided to begin the
study of physics.
Graduate Study in Physics, I.I. Rabi, and
Learning the Physicist's Trade
I entered the physics doctoral program in Columbia University in the
autumn of 1950. Looking back, it seems amazing that I was admitted.
True, I had a summa cum laude bachelor degree, but I had taken only
two courses in physics: one year of elementary physics and a half-year
of atomic physics. There were several reasons I could do this 1950;
it could not have been done today. First, graduate study in physics
was primitive in 1950, compared to today's standards. We did not
study quantum mechanics until the second year, the first year was
devoted completely to classical physics. The most advanced quantum
mechanics we ever studied was a little bit in Heitler, and we were
not expected to be able to do calculaltions in quantum electrodynamics.
Second, there was no thought of advising or course guidance by
the Columbia Physics Department faculty - students were on their
own. I was arrogant about my ability to learn anything fast. By
the time I realized I was in trouble, but the time I realized
that many of my fellow students were smarter than me and better
trained then me, it was too late to quit. I had explained the
return to school to my astonished parents by telling them that
physics was what Einstein did. They thought if Einstein, why not
Martin; I could not quit. I survived the Columbia Physics
Department, never the best student, but an ambitious and
hard-working student. I was married and had one child. I had to
get my Ph.D and once more earn a living.
Just as the Polytechnic Institute was crucial in my learning how
to do engineering; just as Union College and Vladimir Rojansky
were crucial in my choosing physics; so Columbia University and
my thesis advisor, I.I. Rabi,
were crucial in my learning how to do experimental physics. I
undertook for my doctoral research the problem of using the
atomic beam resonance method to measure the quadrupole moment of
the sodium nucleus. This measurement had to be made using an
excited atomic state, and Rabi had found a way to do this.
As is well known, Rabi was not a "hands-on" experimenter. He
never used tools or manipulated the apparatus. I learned
experimental techniques from older gratuate students and by
occasionally going to ask for help or advice from Rabi's
colleague, Polykarp Kusch. I hated to go to Kusch, because it was
always an unpleasant experience. He had a loud voice which he
deliberately made louder so that the entire floor of students
could hear about the stupid question asked by a graduate
student.
Thus as in the course work, I was on my own in learning the
experimenter's trade. I learned quickly, as I tell my graduate
students now, there are no answers in the back of the book when
the equipment doesn't work or the measurements look
strange.
I learned things more precious than experimental techniques from
Rabi. I learned the deep importance of choosing one's own
research problems. Rabi once told me that he would worry when
talking to Leo Szilard that Szilard would propose some idea to
Rabi. This was because Rabi wouldn't carry out an idea suggested
by someone else, even though he had already been thinking about
that same idea.
I learned from Rabi the importance of getting the right answer
and checking it thoroughly. When I finished my measurement of the
quadrupole moment, I was eager to publish and to get on with
earning a living. But Rabi had heard that a similar measurement
had been made by an optical resonance method in France. He wrote
to the French physicists to see if they had a similar answer. He
didn't telephone or cable; he calmly wrote. I waited nervously.
Six or eight weeks later he received the answer that they had a
similar answer; then, I was allowed to publish. It is far better
to be delayed, it is better to be second in publishing a result,
than to publish first with the wrong answer.
It was Rabi who always emphasized the importance of working on a
fundamental problem, and it was Rabi who sent me into elementary
particle physics. It would have been natural for me to continue
in atomic physics, but he preached particle physics to me -
particulary when his colleagues in atomic physics were in the
room. I think that most of that public preaching may have been
Rabi's way of deliberately irritating his colleagues.
Michigan, Bubble Chambers, and On my Own
with L.W. Jones
When I received my Ph.D. in 1955, I had job offers from the Physics
Departments at Yale, the University of Illinois, and the University of Michigan. At that
time, the first two Physics Departments had better reputations in
elementary particle physics, and so I deliberately went to Michigan.
I followed a two-part theorem that I always pass on to my graduate
students and post doctoral research associates. Part 1: don't choose
the most powerful experimental group or department - choose the
group or department where you will have the most freedom. Part 2:
there is an advantage in working in a small or new group - then
you will get the credit for what you accomplish.
At Michigan I first worked in bubble chamber physics with
Donald Glaser. But I wanted to
be on my own. When the Russians flew SPUTNIK in 1957, I saw the
opportunity, and jointly with my colleague, Lawrence W. Jones, we
wrote to Washington for research money. We began our own research
program, using first the now-forgotten luminescent chamber and
then spark chambers. This brings me to the story I tell in my
Nobel lecture on the discovery of the tau lepton.
It was Good Fortune ...
Looking back to to my early years in Brooklyn, at the Polytechnic
Institute, and at the General Electric Company, I am astonished
to be writing a biographical note as a Nobel Laureate. I have tried
to tell how it happened, yet I realize that I have left out the
most crucial element: good fortune. It was good fortune to be a
child during the Depression years and a youth during the war years.
I lived in a country united by the belief that hard work and perseverance
could get one through great difficulties. I saw right triumph. The
progression of my career coincided with the growth of universities
and the tremendous expansion in federal support for basic research,
Academic jobs were relatively easy to get and hold, research funds
were relatively easy to get. All good fortune. Of course, my ultimate
good fortune was that the tau existed.
Life is much harder for the young women and men who are in
science in present times. But they are smarter and better trained
than I was at their ages; they know more and have better
equipment. I wish them good fortune.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1995, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1996
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 1995
MLA style: "Martin L. Perl - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1995/perl.html
