Chicago Sun-Times

U. of C. professor shared Nobel in physics in 1980

- BY JACOB WITTICH Staff Reporter Email: jwittich@suntimes.com Twitter: @JacobWitti­ch

James W. Cronin, a Nobel laureate and professor emeritus of University of Chicago, was remembered over the weekend by one former colleague as “one of the gods of experiment­al science.”

Theoretica­l physicist Chris Quigg met Mr. Cronin when he started working at Fermi National Accelerato­r Laboratory in 1974. Quigg said he would attend weekly seminars organized by Mr. Cronin’s group.

“They were stimulatin­g conversati­ons that James would animate without dominating them,” Quigg recalled. “He had a wonderful way of engaging people and helping his young colleagues grow up.”

Mr. Cronin, a Chicago native, died Thursday in Saint Paul, Minnesota, at 84, according to the university. He will be remembered as an exceptiona­l mentor with a wealth of knowledge he generously shared with the scientific community, Quigg said.

He was awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics with Val Fitch, who died in February 2015, for their 1964 discovery about the laws governing matter and antimatter and how they affect the universe. The two observed the first example of nature’s preference for matter over antimatter, a phenomenon physicists cite as the reason for matter’s existence.

“If you paid attention to what he was thinking about, you were often led to interestin­g directions — you could trust his results and learn a lot from them,” Quigg said. “That discovery changed people’s lives dramatical­ly.” Mr. Cronin earned his bachelor’s degree in 1951 from Southern Methodist University before graduating from the University of Chicago with a Ph. D. in physics in 1955. He returned to the university in 1971. In 1997, he became university professor emeritus of physics and astronomy & astrophysi­cs.

The University of Chicago hailed Mr. Cronin as a mentor, collaborat­or and visionary.

“He inspired us all to reach further into the unknown with deep intuition, solid scientific backing and poetic vision,” Angela Olinto, the Homer J. Livingston distinguis­hed service professor in astronomy and astrophysi­cs, said in a university press release. “He accepted his many recognitio­ns and accolades with so much humility that he encouraged many generation­s to follow his vision.”

After earning his doctorate, Mr. Cronin began his career as an assistant physicist at Brookhaven National Laboratory, where he met Fitch. It was here that the duo conducted the research that resulted in their Nobel Prize. Fitch then brought Mr. Cronin to Princeton, where he taught until 1971.

Mr. Cronin spent his final years as co- leader of the $ 50 million Pierre Auger Project, which he founded in 1992 with physicist Alan Watson. The two created the Auger Observator­y, based in Argentina, which is designed to detect extremely powerful, cosmic rays that periodical­ly travel through Earth’s atmosphere.

“It was definitely a great partnershi­p as we drummed up financial and scientific support for the collaborat­ion,” said Watson in the University of Chicago’s news release. “It’s been an outstandin­g success, and it’s still going strong.”

Mr. Cronin is survived by his wife, Carol; daughter, Emily Grothe; son, Daniel Cronin, and grandchild­ren James, Cathryn, Caroline, Meredith, Alex and Marlo. Arrangemen­ts for a memorial service were pending, according to the university’s news release.

 ?? | UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PHOTO ?? JamesW. Cronin and another physicist created the Auger Observator­y, based in Argentina, to detect cosmic rays.
| UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PHOTO JamesW. Cronin and another physicist created the Auger Observator­y, based in Argentina, to detect cosmic rays.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States