Hannes Alfven
Hannes Olof Gösta Alfvén (May 30, 1908; Norrkoping,
Sweden - April 2, 1995; Djursholm, Sweden) was a Swedish electrical
power engineer. Some considered him an astrophysicist.
Education
He received a PhD from the University of Uppsala in
1934. His thesis was entitled "Investigations of the Ultra-short
Electromagnetic Waves."
Early years
In 1934, Alfvén taught physics at both the University of
Uppsala and the Nobel Institute for Physics in Stockholm. In 1940,
he became professor of electromagnetic theory and electrical measurements
at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm. In 1945, he
acquired the nonappointive Chair of Electronics at Royal Institute
of Technology in Stockholm. It was changed to a Chair of Plasma
Physics in 1963. In 1967, after leaving Sweden and spending some
time in the Soviet Union, he moved to America. He worked in the
departments of electrical engineering at two universities, the
University of California at San Diego and the University of Southern
California.
Alfvén considered himself an electrical power engineer.
During his scientific career, prior to winning the Nobel Prize,
Alfvén was not generally recognized as a leading innovator
in the scientific community (though they were using his work).
He enjoyed the assertion that he was guilty of a fault or offence
by the entry into areas not previously explored in astrophysics
leveled by other cosmologists and theoreticians.
Research, Awards, and Contributions
His work was continuously disputed for many years by the senior
scientist in space physics, the British-American geophysicist Sydney
Chapman. Alfvén had trouble with the peer review system.
He did not in any circumstance benefit without volition the acceptance
generally afforded senior scientists in scientific journals. Alfvén
once submitted a paper on the theory of magnetic storms and auroras
to the leading American journal Terrestrial Magnetism and Atmospheric
Electricity and the paper was rejected on the ground that it did
not agree with the theoretical calculations of convential physics
of the time. He was regarded as a person with unorthodox opinions
in the field by many physicists. He was often forced to publish
his papers in obscure journals.
He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1970 for his work
with magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). In 1988, Alfvén was awarded
by the American Geophysical Union the Bowie medal, for his work
on comets and plasmas in the solar system.
Awards
Alfvén's has also been awarded:
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1967)
Gold Medal of the Franklin Institute (1971)
Lomonosov Medal of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1971)
Memberships
Academies and institutes with Alfvén in their membership:
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (life fellow)
European Physical Society
Royal Swedish Academy
Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Yugoslav Academy of Sciences
Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs
A creative and intuitive intellect of the 20th century, Alfvén
was one of the few scientists who was a foreign members of both
the U.S. and Soviet Academies of Sciences.
Developed and Researched
He played a central role in the development of:
Plasma physics
Charged particle beams
Interplanetary physics
Magnetospheric physics
Magnetohydrodynamics
Solar phenomenon investigation (such as the solar wind)
Aurorae science
In 1939, Alfvén proposed the theory of magnetic storms and
auroras and the theories of plasma dynamics in the earth's magnetosphere.
Electric charges spiraling in magnetic fields caused the motions
of electrons and ions.
Applications of his research in space science include:
Van Allen radiation belt explanations
Earth's magnetic field reduction during magnetic storms
Magnetosphere (protective plasma covering the earth)
Formation of comet tails
Formation of the solar system
Dynamics of plasmas in the galaxy
Fundamental nature of the universe
Alfvén conducted interplanetary and magnetospheric physics
research.
Alfvén's views followed the founder of magnetospheric physics,
Kristian Birkeland. At the end of the nineteenth century, Birkeland
proposed (backed by extensive data) that electric currents flowing
down along the earth's magnetic fields into the atmosphere caused
of the aurora and polar magnetic disturbances.
Alfvén's contributions helped develop:
Particle beam accelerators
Controlled thermonuclear fusion
Hypersonic flight
Rocket propulsion
Reentry braking of space vehicles
Alfvén's contributions to astrophysics:
Galactic magnetic field forms - Cosmic Magnetism (1937)
Identify nonthermal radiation (synchrotron radiation) from astronomical
sources (1950)
In 1963, Alfvén first predicted the large scale filamentary
structure of the universe. This discovery perplexed astrophysicists
till 1991.
Alfvén waves (low frequency hydromagnetic plasma oscillations)
are named in his honor. Many of his theories about the solar system
have been verified as late as the 1980's through measurements of
cometary and planetary magnetospheres by satellites and probes.
Alfvén's theories gained acceptance only two or three decades
after their publication. He is also known for developing plasma
cosmology, a non-standard alternative to the big bang. Among physicists
today, there is a lack of awareness of Alfvén's contributions
to fields of physics where his ideas are routinely used without
recognition.
Alfvén versus the Big Bang
Alfvén and colleagues proposed an alternative cosmology
to both the Steady State and the Big Bang cosmologies. Alfvén
believed the problem with the Big Bang was that astrophysicists
tried to extrapolate the origin of the universe from mathematical
theories developed on the blackboard. The Big Bang was a myth according
to Alfvén. This myth was devised to explain creation according
to Alfvén. He confided with close friends that the theory
tried to make science compatible with the authoritative declaration
of creatio ex nihilo or creation out of nothing.
Alfvén proposed a plasma universe. This theory is called
Plasma Cosmology. He acknowledged that the theory may take time
to be accepted by the popular consciousness.
Later years
In 1991, Alfvén retired his posts of professor of electrical
engineering at the University of California at San Diego and professor
of plasma physics at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm
.
Alfvén spent his life alternating between California and
Sweden. He died when he was 86 years old.
Personal life
He had a goodis sense of humor. Alfvén participated in a
variety of social issues and worldwide disarmament movements. Alfvén
had a long-standing distrust of computers. Alfvén studied
the history of science and oriental philosophy and religion. He
spoke English, German, and French, and Russian, and some Spanish
and some Chinese.
Hannes Alfvén's was married for 67 years to Kirsten. They
raised five children, one boy and four girls.
Alfvén wrote popular science books:
Worlds-Antiworlds
Antimatter in Cosmology (1966)
The Great Computer: A Vision (1968) [pen name: Olof Johannesson]
Atom, Man, and the Universe: A Long Chain of Complications (1969)
Living on the Third Planet (1972).
Quotes
"We have to learn again that science without contact with
experiments is an enterprise which is likely to go completely astray
into imaginary conjecture." - H. Alfvén
"
The appeal of the Big Bang has been more ideological than scientific.
When men think about the universe, there is always a conflict between
the mythical approach and the empirical scientific approach. In
myth, one tries to deduce how the gods must have created the world
- what perfect principles must have been used." - H. Alfvén
"During Alfvén's visit he gave a lecture at the University
of Chicago, which was attended by [Enrico] Fermi. As Alfvén
described his work, Fermi nodded his head and said, 'Of course.'
The next day the entire world of physics said. 'Oh. of course."'
- Alex Dessler, editor Geophysical Research Letters
"When I entered the field of space physics in 1956, I recall
that I fell in with the crowd believing, for example, that electric
fields could not exist in the highly conducting plasma of space.
It was three years later that I was shamed by S.Chandrasekhar into
investigating Alfvén's work objectively. My degree of shock
and surprise in finding Alfvén right and his critics wrong
can hardly be described. I learned that a cosmic ray acceleration
mechanism basically identical to the famous mechanism suggested
by Fermi in 1949 had [previously] been put forth by Alfvén." -
Alex Dessler
External links
Hannes
Alfvén (Nobel Foundation)
Hannes
Alfvén bio (Los Alamos)
Papers of Hannes Olof Gosta Alfven
Other Alfvén
quotes
Hannes
Alfvén Medal - awarded for outstanding scientific
contributions towards the understanding of plasma processes in
the solar system and other cosmical plasma environments
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