Nobel laureate Ben Roy Mottelson dies at age 95
Ben Roy Mottelson, an American-born physicist who shared the Nobel Prize for a groundbreaking explanation of the structure and behavior of the atomic nucleus, including its shape, its rotations and its oscillations, died May 13. He was 95.
His death was confirmed by Nordita, the Danish institute for theoretical physics where he was a professor emeritus. No additional details were provided.
Dr. Mottelson and his cowinners of the 1975 prize were honored for work that scientists regard as one of the landmarks in the development of nuclear physics.
By 1945, scientists knew enough about the nucleus — the collection of protons and neutrons at the core of the atom — to pry it apart, releasing vast quantities of energy, and inaugurating what we recognize as the nuclear age.
Even so, their understanding of the nucleus and its structure was far from complete. Many mysteries remained, and many properties of the nucleus and much of its behavior lacked an adequate explanation. Knowledge of nuclear structure is regarded as vital in weapons research, power generation and in solving the problems of astrophysics and the history of the universe.
In what is still regarded as one of the crowning achievements of nuclear physics, Dr. Mottelson helped show, using arguments and techniques from quantum theory, how each individual constituent of the nucleus — each proton and each neutron — exerted an effect on the properties and character of the nucleus as a whole. And vice versa.
“I find it a really wonderful discovery,” Victor Weisskopf, a leading 20th-century theoretical physicist, once said. “It’s just beautiful.”
Dr. Mottelson shared the prize with Aage Bohr of Denmark and James Rainwater of the United States.
The Nobel Committee honored them “for the discovery of the connection between collective motion and particle motion in atomic nuclei and the development of the theory of the structure of the atomic nucleus based on this connection.”
Dr. Mottelson worked particularly closely with Bohr, and the theory that has become a milestone in understanding the nucleus is known as the Bohr-mottelson theory.
It couples the actions of single particles to the actions of the entire nucleus and showed how each had the ability to act in a way apparently independent of the others. But it also showed how the actions of the constituent particles — and of the entire collection of particles — also depended on the actions of the others.