| Maria Goeppert Mayer
(1906-1972) |
![]() |
| In 1910 her father went as a professor of
Pediatrics to Gottingen where she
spent most of her life until marriage. She went to private and public schools in Gottingen and had the great privilege to have very good teachers. It was somehow never discussed, but taken for granted by her parents as well as herself that she would go to the University. Yet, at the time it was not exceptionally easy for a woman to do so. In Gottingen there was only a privately endowed school which prepared girls for the entrance examination for the university. The school closed it's doors during the time of the inflation, but the teachers continued to give instructions to the pupils. Maria Goeppert finally took the abitur examination in Hannover, in 1924, being examined by teachers she had never seen in her life. In the spring of 1924 she enrolled at the University of Gottingen, with the intention of becoming a mathematician. But she soon found herself becoming mor and more attracted to physics. This was the time when quantum mechanics was young and exciting. Except for one term which she spent in Cambridge, England, where her greatest profit was to learn English, her entire university career took place in Gottingen. |
![]() |
| She is deeply thankful to Max Born, for his kind guidance of
her scientific education. In 1930 she took
her doctorate in theoretical physics. There were three Nobel Prize winners on the doctoral committee, Born, Franck, and Windaus. Shortly before, she had met Joseph Edward Mayer, an American Rockefeller fellow working with James Franck. In 1930 she went with him to the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. This was the time of the depression, and no university would think of employing the wife of a professor. But she kept working, doing odd jobs for the professors such as typing letters, and helping the teachers with the problems of physics, just for the fun of doing something that involved physics. |
![]() |
| In 1939 they went to Columbia. Dr. Goeppert Mayer taught
one year at Sarah
Lawrence College, but she worked mainly at the S.A.M. Laboratory, on the separation of isotopes of uranium, with Harold Urey as director. Urey usually assigned her not to the main line of research of the laboratory, but to side issues, for instance, to the investigation of the possibility of separating isotopes by photochemical reactions. This was nice, clean physics although it did not help in the separation of isotopes. |
![]() |
| In 1948 she started to work on nuclear shell structure and the meaning
of
the "magic numbers (see last page)". She postulated these numbers to be the shell numbers of a shell model, a "nuclear counterpart to the closed shells of electrons" at the atomic level. She saw the nucleus as being like an onion with the protons and neutrons revolving around each other in layers. This shell was not original with her, but when she described the pattern of the circling protons and neutrons as "spin-orbiting" one pair going clockwise, the other going counter clockwise, she broke new ground. She saw the role her seven "magic numbers" played. They represented the most abundant elements because in these elements the nuclear particles were very tightly bound together, going in a clockwise-counter clockwise, clockwise-counter clockwise pattern |
![]() |
| In 1960 they came to La Jolla where Maria Goeppert Mayer was
a professor of
physics. She was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a corresponding member of the Akademie der Wissenschaften in Heidelberg. She has received honorary degrees of Doctor of science from Russel Sage College, Mount Holyoke College and Smith College. When Maria Goeppert Mayer won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1963 she became only the second US woman ever to a Nobel Prize, and the first US woman to do so in physics. Her work promoted the theory that the stability of the atomic nuclei is due to the arrangement of the protons and the neutrons in relatively fixed shells or orbits. She publically encouraged young woman to pursue careers in the sciences. After having two children both born in Baltimore, Maria Goeppert Mayer died in San Diego on February 20th, 1972, after a protracted illness. |
![]() |
http://hum.amu.edu.pl/~zbzw/ph/sci/mgm.htm
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/Phase2/Mayer,_Maria_Goeppert@844444444.html
http://www.anl.gov/OPA/frontiers96/mgm.html
http://www.greatwomen.org/mayer.htm