The invention of the laser, which stands for light
amplification by stimulated emission of radiation, can be dated to 1958 with
the publication of the scientific paper, Infrared and Optical Masers, by
Arthur L. Schawlow, then a Bell Labs researcher, and Charles H. Townes, a
consultant to Bell Labs. That paper, published in Physical Review, the
journal of the American Physical Society, launched a new scientific field and
opened the door to a multibillion-dollar industry.
Arthur L. Schawlow adjusts a ruby optical maser during
an experiment at Bell Labs, while C. G. B. Garrett prepares to photograph the
maser flash.
1964 Nobel Laureate in Physics
For
fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics, which has led to the
construction of oscillators and amplifiers based on the maser-laser principle.
Charles Hard
Townes was born in
Physics had fascinated him since his first course in the subject during his
sophomore year in college because of its "beautifully logical
structure". He was also interested in natural history while at Furman,
serving as curator of the museum, and working during the summers as collector
for Furman's biology camp. In addition, he was busy with other activities,
including the swimming team, the college newspaper and the football band.
Townes completed work for the Master of Arts degree in Physics at
A member of the technical staff of Bell Telephone Laboratories from 1933 to
1947, Dr. Townes worked extensively during World War II in designing radar
bombing systems and has a number of patents in related technology. From this he
turned his attention to applying the microwave technique of wartime radar
research to spectroscopy, which he foresaw as providing a powerful new tool for
the study of the structure of atoms and molecules and as a potential new basis
for controlling electromagnetic waves.
At
Dr. Townes and his students coined the word "maser" for this
device, which is an acronym for microwave amplification by stimulated emission
of radiation. In 1958, Dr. Townes and his brother-in-law, Dr. A.L. Schawlow,
for some time a professor at Stanford University but now deceased, showed
theoretically that masers could be made to operate in the optical and infrared
region and proposed how this could be accomplished in particular systems.
This work resulted in their joint paper on optical and infrared masers, or
lasers (light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation). Other
research has been in the fields of nonlinear optics, radio astronomy, and
infrared astronomy. He and his assistants detected the first complex molecules
in interstellar space and first measured the mass of the black hole in the
center of our galaxy.
Having joined the faculty at
From 1959 to 1961, he was on leave of absence from
In 1961, Dr. Townes was appointed Provost and Professor of Physics at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. As Provost he shared with the President
responsibility for general supervision of the educational and research programs
of the Institute. In 1966, he became Institute Professor at M.I.T., and later
in the same year resigned from the position of Provost in order to return to
more intensive research, particularly in the fields of quantum electronics and
astronomy. He was appointed University Professor at the
In this position Dr. Townes is participating in teaching, research, and
other activities on several campuses of the University, although he is located
at the
During 1955 and 1956, Townes was a Guggenheim Fellow and a Fulbright
Lecturer, first at the
In
addition to the Nobel Prize, Townes has received the Templeton Prize, for
contributions to the understanding of religion, and a number of other prizes as
well as 27 honorary degrees from various universities.
Dr. Townes
has served on a number of scientific committees advising governmental agencies
and has been active in professional societies. This includes being a member,
and vice chairman, of the Science Advisory Committee to the President of the
Dr. Townes
and his wife (the former Frances H. Brown; they married in 1941) live at