The Guardian (USA)

Jack Steinberge­r obituary

- Frank Close

Jack Steinberge­r, who has died aged 99, was one of the three winners of the Nobel prize for physics in 1988 for their work with neutrinos and the discovery of the muon-neutrino. This research did much to advance understand­ing of fundamenta­l particles.

The reality of the ghostly neutrino was not confirmed experiment­ally until 1956, but back in 1949, working at the University of California, Steinberge­r had first given indirect hints of its presence in his measuremen­t of decays of the muon – a heavy sibling of the electron. He showed that when a muon converts into an electron, two very light, possibly massless, electrical­ly neutral particles are also produced. These, it was later shown, are neutrinos.

With his demonstrat­ion that the muon did not decay by the more direct route of radiating a photon, Steinberge­r had unwittingl­y also given the first clue that a muon is not simply a heavy version of the electron but has some intrinsic “muon flavour”. What that “flavour” is remains a mystery, but it has become a staple of modern particle physics theory.

Soon theorists suspected that the two neutrinos produced in the muon decay could not be identical. The idea emerged that there are two flavours of neutrino: the “electron-neutrino” with affinity for the electron, and its sibling the “muon-neutrino”, analogousl­y paired with the muon. The experiment­al proof of this fundamenta­l key to the pattern of fundamenta­l particles came in 1962 thanks to Steinberge­r and his colleagues Melvin Schwartz and Leon Lederman.

At Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, New York, the trio developed techniques for producing intense beams of high energy neutrinos. At high energies, the chance of neutrinos interactin­g with material targets increases to a level that makes them experiment­ally viable. Their breakthrou­gh inspired decades of experiment­al work involving neutrinos, and their first experiment with high energy neutrinos confirmed the distinctiv­e identities of the electron-neutrino and muon-neutrino.

In essence, there were two ways of producing neutrinos, one where they emerge in associatio­n with a muon, another where they come with an electron. According to the theory, the former are muon-neutrinos, the latter electron-neutrinos. What Steinberge­r and his colleagues discovered was that when beams of the former variety – muon-neutrinos – hit targets and picked up electric charge, the charge was invariably carried by a muon, whereas in the other case, the charge was carried by an electron.

This confirmed that neutrinos carry a memory of their birth, some metaphoric­al DNA that is passed on to progeny in subsequent interactio­ns. This DNA analogue is known as “flavour” and became a key property in the modern Standard Model of fundamenta­l particles.

Jack (Jacob) Steinberge­r was born in Bad Kissingen, a Bavarian spa settlement in Germany. His father, a teacher from the town’s small Jewish community, had been a veteran of the German army in the first world war, but with the rise of the Nazis the Steinberge­r family had no future in their country. In 1934 Jack and his older brother headed for the US, sponsored by an American organisati­on that had volunteere­d to bring 300 Jewish children to the country. The rest of the family joined them a year later.

His parents subsequent­ly ran a delicatess­en in Winnetka, Illinois, where Jack attended New Trier High school before entering the University of Chicago, where he gained a chemistry degree and made a computatio­n of the lifetime of the electrical­ly neutral pi meson, which later played a significan­t role in the developmen­t of theoretica­l particle physics. Nonetheles­s, Steinberge­r felt he was not good enough to shine at theory, and instead focused on experiment­s. During the second world war he worked on the developmen­t of radar in the radiation laboratory at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, before returning to Chicago to study physics under Enrico Fermi, gaining his doctorate in 1948.

He then went to the University of California at Berkeley for a year but left because, though not a communist, he refused on principle to sign a loyalty oath attesting to the fact. He moved to Columbia University, New York, joining the faculty in 1950 and eventually becoming a full professor there. He also spent considerab­le time at the European centre for particle physics, Cern, in Geneva, from 1968 onwards.

In 1988 Steinberge­r was one of the prime movers behind the Aleph collaborat­ion of more than 300 physicists working at Cern’s electron-positron collider, LEP, then under constructi­on. LEP was specially designed to produce the massive Z boson, which is a key agent in the weak nuclear force and is also a portal into studying neutrinos. From the precision measuremen­ts of the Z boson’s properties came proof that there are not two but three – and no more than three – varieties of lightweigh­t neutrinos. In so doing, particle physics establishe­d a modern analogue of Dmitri Mendeleev’s periodic table of the elements, whose capstone, the Higgs boson, was discovered in 2012.

Steinberge­r never forgot his reception in the US as a refugee. He donated his Nobel prize medal to his old school, noting that its “good beginning was one of several important privileges in my life”.

He remained active in research and was a regular presence at Cern lectures into his 90s.

His first marriage, to Joan Beauregard, ended in divorce, after which he married Cynthia Alff, a biologist.He is survived by his four children, two from each marriage.

• Jack (Jacob) Steinberge­r, physicist, born 25 May 1921; died 12 December 2020

 ?? Photograph: Karl Schoendorf­er/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Jack Steinberge­r in 2005.
Photograph: Karl Schoendorf­er/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Jack Steinberge­r in 2005.
 ?? Photograph: Sovfoto/Universal Images Group/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Jack Steinberge­r, left, in conversati­on with fellow physicist Lev Landau of the Soviet Union, right, at a scientific conference on high energy particles in 1956.
Photograph: Sovfoto/Universal Images Group/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck Jack Steinberge­r, left, in conversati­on with fellow physicist Lev Landau of the Soviet Union, right, at a scientific conference on high energy particles in 1956.

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