It doesn't matter what the world says about Israel, it matters what we do.

David Ben Gurion

Louis Witten - Biography

Louis Witten (born April 13, 1921) is an American theoretical physicist and the father of Edward Witten.

Witten's research has centered around classical gravitation, including the discovery of certain exact electrovacuum solutions to the Einstein field equation. He edited an important review (see citation below) which contains papers by leading contributors such as ADM (Arnowitt, Deser, and Misner), Choquet-Bruhat, Ehlers and Kundt, Goldberg, and Pirani which remain valuable to researchers after the passage of more than 40 years.

Early life and education

Louis Witten was born to a Jewish family in Baltimore, Maryland. His parents, Abraham Witten and Bessie Perman, emigrated to the United States from Eastern Europe as teenagers in 1909 and were married in 1916. Witten graduated as a Civil Engineer from The Johns Hopkins University in 1941. From 1942 to 1946 he served in the US Army Air Forces as a Radar Weather Officer.

He was a graduate student in physics at The Johns Hopkins University from 1948 to 1951 when he received the PhD degree. His dissertation, in statistical mechanics, was entitled "A Model of an Imperfect Gas". His thesis advisor was Theodore H. Berlin. In 1949 he married Lorraine Wollach of Baltimore. They had four children, Edward, Celia, Matthew, and Jesse. Lorraine died in 1987. In 1992 he married Francis Lydia DeLange.

Academic career

After postdoctoral study at Princeton University, the University of Maryland, and the Lincoln Laboratory of MIT, Witten joined RIAS, the research laboratory of the Martin-Marietta Corporation. In 1968 he became a Professor of Physics at the University of Cincinnati where he remained until his retirement in 1991. Since 1968 he has been a Vice-President and Director of Science Affairs of the Gravity Research Foundation.







The article is about these people: Louis Witten

This information is published under GNU Free Document License (GFDL).
You should be logged in, in order to edit this article.

Discussion

Please log in / register, to leave a comment

Welcome to JewAge!
Learn about the origins of your family