- Davis, Raymond, Jr.
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▪ 2007American physicist (b. Oct. 14, 1914, Washington, D.C.—d. May 31, 2006, Blue Point, N.Y.), won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2002 (with Masatoshi Koshiba) for having detected neutrinos. Riccardo Giacconi also won a share of the award for his work on X-rays. Davis received a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1942. He joined (1948) Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, N.Y., where he remained until his retirement in 1984. In 1985 Davis took a post as a research professor with the University of Pennsylvania. Davis's prizewinning work focused on neutrinos, subatomic particles that had long baffled scientists. Since the 1920s it had been suspected that the Sun shines because of nuclear fusion reactions that transform hydrogen into helium and release energy. Later, theoretical calculations indicated that countless neutrinos must be released in those reactions and, consequently, that Earth must be exposed to a constant flood of solar neutrinos. Because neutrinos interact weakly with matter, however, only one in every trillion is stopped on its way to Earth. Neutrinos thus developed a reputation for being undetectable. In the 1960s, in a gold mine in South Dakota, Davis built an underground neutrino detector, a huge tank filled with more than 600 tons of the cleaning fluid tetrachloroethylene. He calculated that high-energy neutrinos passing through the tank should form 20 argon atoms a month on average, and he developed a way to count those exceedingly rare atoms. Monitoring the tank for more than 25 years, he was able to confirm that the Sun produces neutrinos, but he consistently found fewer neutrinos than predicted.
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▪ American scientistborn Oct. 14, 1914, Washington, D.C., U.S.died May 31, 2006, Blue Point, N.Y.American physicist who, with Koshiba Masatoshi, won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2002 for detecting neutrinos. Riccardo Giacconi (Giacconi, Riccardo) also won a share of the award for his work on X-rays.Davis received a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1942. After military service during World War II, he joined Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, N.Y., in 1948. He remained there until his retirement in 1984. In 1985 Davis took a post as a research professor with the University of Pennsylvania.Davis's prizewinning work focused on neutrinos (neutrino), subatomic particles that had long baffled scientists. Since the 1920s it had been suspected that the Sun shines because of nuclear fusion reactions that transform hydrogen into helium and release energy. Later, theoretical calculations indicated that countless neutrinos must be released in those reactions and, consequently, that Earth must be exposed to a constant flood of solar neutrinos. Because neutrinos interact weakly with matter, however, only one in every trillion is stopped on its way to Earth. Neutrinos thus developed a reputation for being undetectable.Some of Davis's contemporaries had speculated that one type of nuclear reaction might produce neutrinos with enough energy to make them detectable. If such a neutrino collided with a chlorine atom, it should form a radioactive argon nucleus. In the 1960s, in a gold mine in South Dakota, Davis built an underground neutrino detector, a huge tank filled with more than 600 tons of the cleaning fluid tetrachloroethylene. He calculated that high-energy neutrinos passing through the tank should form 20 argon atoms a month on average, and he developed a way to count those exceedingly rare atoms. Monitoring the tank for more than 25 years, he was able to confirm that the Sun produces neutrinos, but he consistently found fewer neutrinos than predicted. This deficit became known as the solar neutrino problem. Davis's results were later confirmed by Koshiba, who also found evidence that neutrinos change from one type to another in flight. Because Davis's detector was sensitive to only one type, those that had switched identity eluded detection.* * *
Universalium. 2010.