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Emilio Segrè

Emilio SegrèAKA Emilio Gino Segrè

Born: 30-Jan-1905 [1]
Birthplace: Tivoli, Italy
Died: 22-Apr-1989
Location of death: Lafayette, CA
Cause of death: Heart Failure
Remains: Buried, Lafayette Cemetery, Lafayette, CA

Gender: Male
Religion: Jewish
Race or Ethnicity: White
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Physicist

Nationality: United States
Executive summary: Co-Discoverer of the antiproton

Military service: Italian Army, to second lieutenant (1928-29)

American chemist and nuclear laureate Emilio Segr� was born and raised in Italy, and was Enrico Fermi's first graduate student at the University of Rome. In 1937 with mineralogist Carlo Perrier (1886-1948) he discovered technetium, the first man-made element. Technetium, named from a Greek word meaning artificial, is formed when molybdenum is irradiated with deuterium nuclei. It is a radioactive metal that has been used as a tracer and anti-corrosive in steel. In 1938, however, Segr� was fired from his position as Administrator of the Physics Laboratory at the University of Palermo, not for any misconduct but because the fascist government of Italy under Benito Mussolini had deemed that Jewish scientists should not be allowed to hold such posts.

He then came to America, where he worked under Ernest Lawrence at the University of California's Berkeley Radiation Lab. In 1940, he was part of a team of scientists that proved the existence of astatine by bombarding bismuth-209 with alpha particles. During World War II his parents were taken prisoner by Nazi forces; his mother was killed but his father escaped. In America, meanwhile, Segr� was a group leader in the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, America's secret program to build an atomic bomb, and described the project as "a dream scientific community behind barbed wire". In 1944 he made the crucial discovery that plutonium made in a nuclear reactor has higher levels of the isotope plutonium-240 than plutonium produced in a cyclotron. In the same year, he became an American citizen.

He is best known for his 21 September 1955 discovery with Owen Chamberlain of the antiproton, the unstable negatively charged proton that exists as the antiparticle of a proton. This helped to support Paul Dirac's theory or antimatter, and earned the Chamberlain and Segr� the Nobel Prize for Physics four years later.


[1] Frequently but erroneously listed as 1 February 1905, due to a bureaucratic delay in filing his birth certificate.

Father: Giuseppe Segrè (paper manufacturer, b. 1859, d. 1944 natural causes)
Mother: Amelia Treves (b. 1868, d. 1943 World War II)
Wife: Elfriede Spiro (m. 2-Feb-1936, d. 1970 heart attack, one son, two daughters)
Son: Claudio (b. 1937)
Daughter: Amelia (b. 1942)
Daughter: Fausta (b. 1945)
Wife: Rosa Mines (m. 1972, d. 1997)

    High School: Ginnasio Mamiani, Rome (1922)
    University:
PhD Physics, University of Rome (1928)
    Scholar: Nuclear Physics, University of Rome (1929-31)
    Scholar: Physics, University of Amsterdam (1931-32)
    Scholar: Physical Chemistry, University of Hamburg (1930-31)
    Teacher: Theoretical Physics, University of Rome (1932-36)
    Administrator: Physics Laboratory, University of Palermo (1936-38)
    Scholar: Radiation Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley (1938-43)
    Teacher: Physics, University of California at Berkeley (1940-43)
    Professor: Physics, University of California at Berkeley (1946-89)

    Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, 1930
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1936-38
    Manhattan Project Group leader, 1943-46
    Los Alamos National Laboratory
    Fulbright 1951
    National Academy of Sciences 1952
    Guggenheim Fellowship 1953
    Cannizzaro Prize of the Accademia dei Lincei 1955
    August Wilhelm von Hofmann Medal for Chemistry 1958
    Nobel Prize for Physics 1959 (with Owen Chamberlain)
    Accademia dei Lincei
    American Academy of Arts and Sciences
    American Physical Society
    German Academy of Science Corresponding Member
    Heart Attack 22-Apr-1989 (fatal)
    Jewish Ancestry
    Italian Ancestry
    Naturalized US Citizen 1944

Author of books:
Experimental Nuclear Physics (1953)
Nuclei and Particles (1964)
Enrico Fermi: Physicist (1970, biography)
From X-rays to Quarks: Modern Physicists and Their Discoveries (1980)
From Falling Bodies to Radio Waves (1984)
A Mind Always in Motion: The Autobiography of Emilio Segr� (1993, memoir; posthumous)


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