Nicolaas Bloembergen is a Dutch-American physicist who won a share of the Nobel Prize in Physics 1981
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Nicolaas Bloembergen is a Dutch-American physicist who won a share of the Nobel Prize in Physics 1981
Nicolaas Bloembergen born at
He married Huberta Deliana Brink in 1950. His wife is a pianist and artist, and the couple has three children.
Nicolaas Bloembergen was born on March 11, 1920, in Dordrecht, Netherlands, to Auke Bloembergen and Sophia Maria Quint as one of their six children. His father, a chemical engineer, was an executive in a chemical fertilizer company. His mother was a highly educated woman who chose to focus her efforts on raising her family. His maternal grandfather was a high school principal with a Ph.D. in mathematical physics.
Nicolaas Bloembergen joined the municipal gymnasium in Utrecht as a 12-year-old and became drawn to science, especially physics as a teenager.
In 1938, Bloembergen entered the University of Utrecht to study physics. There he thrived under the guidance of Professor L.S. Ornstein who recognized the youngster’s potential and gave him ample opportunities to gain new knowledge and experience.
His idyllic student years were threatened by the increasingly chaotic political climate in Europe in the early 1940s as the World War II raged on. Germany occupied the Netherlands in 1940 and his beloved teacher Ornstein was removed from the university in 1941. Bloembergen somehow managed to continue his studies and obtained the degree of Phil. Drs., equivalent to a M.Sc. degree before the Nazis closed the university completely in 1943.
The following two years were nightmarish for the young man who spent his days hiding indoors to escape the Nazis, surviving on whatever he could get his hands on to eat. Despite the difficulties, he continued reading books by the light of a storm lamp.
Nicolaas Bloembergen became a Junior Fellow of the Society of Fellows in Harvard in 1949. In 1951, he became an Associate Professor. In 1957, he became Gordon McKay Professor of Applied Physics, a title he held until 1980.
His initial research was on nuclear magnetic resonance. During the early years of his career, he studied nuclear quadrupole interactions in alloys and imperfect ionic crystals, and developed an understanding of the scalar and tensor indirect nuclear spin-spin coupling in metals and insulators.
His research played a vital role in his team’s experiments in microwave spectroscopy, which led the group to develop a crystal maser in 1956. He designed a three-stage crystal maser that eventually became the most widely used microwave amplifier.
He also performed major work in the field of laser spectroscopy, which allows high-precision observations of atomic structure. His research in this area ultimately led him to formulate nonlinear optics, a new theoretical approach to the analysis of how electromagnetic radiation interacts with matter.
He served as the Rumford Professor of Physics from 1974 to 1980, and was appointed Gerhard Gade University Professor in 1980. He retired from Harvard in 1990.
A world renowned expert on laser spectroscopy, Nicolaas Bloembergen is credited with developing a technique which allows high-precision observations of atomic structure. He also designed a three-stage crystal maser that went on to become the most widely used microwave amplifier.