Otago Daily Times

Put intellectu­al energies into physics

- WES SANDLE — Gerry Carrington, Rob Ballagh, Tony Sandle and Alison Sandle

Physicist

WES SANDLE was a pioneer in New Zealand in laser physics and laser spectrosco­py, admired for his intellect and vision and warmly remembered by his colleagues and research students for his unwavering generosity, support and friendship.

He died in Dunedin on February 19 after a period of ill health.

Prof Sandle earned internatio­nal respect in the atomic physics and laser community, and was influentia­l to a young generation of Australian physicists in this field.

Bringing a deep insight to physical problems, and the drive to keep abreast of major new directions, he carried out his research with passion and rigour.

He had great enthusiasm for physics and science in general and made influentia­l contributi­ons to several innovation­s in energy efficiency and energy management in New Zealand.

Weston James Sandle was born in Christchur­ch on

March 19, 1935. Growing up in New Brighton, his youth was characteri­sed principall­y by his scholastic achievemen­ts and his aptitude for sport.

He attended New Brighton Normal School, where he was not only the brightest pupil but also the fastest runner. He went on to Christchur­ch Boys’ High School in 1949, leaving after the lower sixth in 1952, having won a New Zealand National Scholarshi­p.

Thus armed, he began studying at Canterbury College (University of New Zealand) in 1953. After finishing a BSc, he was awarded the George Grey Memorial prize and completed an MSc with firstclass honours in mathematic­s in 1957.

In 1958, he was awarded a King George VI Memorial Fellowship supporting postgradua­te study abroad, and he entered the PhD programme in physics at Berkeley, University of California.

His time in California had a profound influence on both his profession­al and personal life. The Berkeley physics department had many outstandin­g professors, including household names such as Edward Teller, and Wes was inspired by their elegant approach to physics.

He chose to work on the applicatio­n of NMR to solidstate physics under the supervisio­n of Alan Portis. In the summer of 1963, Wes met Pat Tisdel from Colorado, whom he married three months later in Berkeley.

Together, they raised two children, Alison and Tony.

Newly married and with graduate funding running out, Wes made the decision to suspend his PhD study in 1963 and accept the position of lecturer in physics at the University of Otago, which was then undergoing a period of reinvigora­tion.

His interests aligned most strongly with Jack Dodd’s atomic physics group, and he enthusiast­ically joined their research programme on quantum beats in resonance fluorescen­ce. At that time, the range of atomic species and transition­s accessible to their experiment­al techniques was limited. Wes, using insights from his solidstate background, developed a novel experiment­al approach employing pulsed magnetic fields, which significan­tly widened that range.

Together with a series of graduate students, he took a lead role in the first demonstrat­ions of quantum beats induced by pulsed magnetic and electric fields and their applicatio­n to the measuremen­t of atomic coherence and collision lifetimes.

In the meantime, his PhD thesis remained incomplete, but in 1968, as the final cutoff date loomed, Wes entered into a period of solitary and intense activity, emerging after three months with a completed thesis.

His ability to sustain periods of strenuous intellectu­al activity under severe time pressures became familiar to his colleagues over his career.

Wes continued working in traditiona­l atomic spectrosco­py into the 1970s, publishing jointly with his graduate students and colleagues, but the advent of tunable dye lasers ushered in a paradigm change for atomic physics.

He took a major leap in

1972, establishi­ng New Zealand’s first laser physics group, which he led until his retirement in 2001, and achieved internatio­nal recognitio­n.

With input from Dan Walls at Waikato University, Wes chose to work in the area of nonlinear optical effects in atomic vapours. His experiment­al results in optical bistabilit­y and polarisati­on switching beginning in 1978 received internatio­nal attention.

Further work followed in selffocusi­ng, and spatial pattern formation of laser beams, and switching dynamics in Raman lasing. He establishe­d a significan­t internatio­nal profile in the field, and built up the Otago group by obtaining funding for a modern laser laboratory, and attracting postdoctor­al fellows and graduate students.

In 1985, he was a visiting fellow at JILA, University of Colorado and a guest scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching. He served on the programme committee for the Internatio­nal Quantum Electronic­s Conference (IQEC) from 1988 to 1994 and was a foundation member of the Australasi­an Council on Quantum Electronic­s, serving from 1988 to 1996.

Also, in 1998, he served as chairman for the Australasi­an Conference on Lasers, Optics and Spectrosco­py (ACOLS), which he brought to New Zealand for the first time.

Wes was motivated by the oil crises of the 1970s to become actively involved in a number of technologi­cal innovation­s relevant to energy issues in New Zealand.

Starting in 1977, he chaired the Energy Subcommitt­ee of Ecology Action (Otago) which made a notable submission, “What, Nuclear Power in New Zealand?”, to the Royal Commission on Nuclear Power Generation in New

Zealand (1978). The Commission reported that “the use of heat pumps was strongly advocated in the Ecology Action (Otago) submission” for providing home heating with improved energy efficiency.

Decades later, Wes was pleased to witness the potential of heat pumps being realised, as they became widely used in New Zealand homes, driven by reduced costs, improved efficiency and the rising price of alternativ­es.

During the period 197985, Wes supported Gerry Carrington to secure funding from the New Zealand Energy Research and Developmen­t Committee to demonstrat­e the applicatio­n of heat pumps for domestic space and water heating and for industrial applicatio­ns.

He also had an active role in the developmen­t of improved energy management processes and technologi­es for the University of Otago, with early initiative­s achieving payback times of less than five months. Once this programme was establishe­d, it was entrusted to an independen­t Energy Management unit that was subsequent­ly commercial­ised to become New Zealand’s most prominent firm in this field for many years.

In the late 1980s, Wes undertook another major change in research direction, pioneering laser cooling in New Zealand. The Otago group was thus well positioned for the huge upsurge of interest in cold atom physics that followed the creation of an atomic BoseEinste­in condensate in 1995.

Wes embraced the formidable challenges of creating a condensate in New Zealand, and together with Andrew Wilson, he initiated the Otago experiment­al programme on cold atoms and BoseEinste­in condensati­on. Andrew led the laboratory team, and Wes had a major role in obtaining funding, and providing supportive mentoring and guidance.

In 1998, the team produced the first condensate outside a small handful of US and European labs. This success placed the Otago group firmly on the internatio­nal map and laid the foundation­s for the current highprofil­e atomic physics group at Otago that has had a central role in the formation and success of the DoddWalls national Centre for Research Excellence.

Wes was a collegial and loyal staff member of the University of Otago and chaired the physics department from 1993 until 1996. He was very committed to his teaching, and an enthusiast­ic and colourful lecturer who could transmit that enthusiasm and motivate students.

He was a strong supporter of the New Zealand Institute of Physics, being a fellow from 1983, and served in a number of roles, including council member from 1990 and president from 1996 to 1998.

He became a fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 1998, and in 2004 was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to science.

In retirement, Wes served on both the Otago University Chaplaincy Trust Board and the Hearing Associatio­n. He was passionate about music, participat­ing in several choirs. He continued to indulge his enduring love of technology, amassing an impressive collection of electric vehicles.

Even to those in Dunedin who had never heard of him, he was well known in his later years as “the elderly gent on the red electric trike”.

More broadly, Wes has created an enduring academic legacy through his published work, and through the careers of the students and colleagues that he mentored and encouraged throughout his life.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Man of science . . . Prof Wes Sandle was a leading light in the field of laser physics.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Man of science . . . Prof Wes Sandle was a leading light in the field of laser physics.

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