Ching-Liang Lin Explained

Ching-Liang Lin
Birth Date:1931 1, df=y
Birth Place:Okayama, Okayama, Takao Prefecture, Taiwan, Empire of Japan (today Gangshan District, Kaohsiung, Taiwan)
Death Place:Zhongzheng District, Taipei, Taiwan
Employer:National Taiwan University
Occupation:Physicist
Nationality:Empire of Japan (until 1945)
Republic of China (after 1945)

Ching-Liang Lin (; 22 January 1931 – 18 November 2019) was a Taiwanese physicist and professor at National Taiwan University. She was the first woman to be head of the university's department of physics.

Life

She was born in 1931 in Takao Prefecture (present-day Kaoshiung). She graduated from Kaohsiung Municipal Kaohsiung Girls' Senior High School. She was a witness to the February 28 incident in 1947 which killed thousands in Taiwan and resulted in decades of martial law known as the White Terror. During this time, she chose to focus on the study of physics. She attended the University of Tokyo and was awarded a doctorate in physics in 1966.[1] She returned to Taiwan in 1970 and was asked to create a physics department at Soowchow University. She married another academic, Feng Tsuan Hua, around 1972 and they left for a couple of years to work in Massachusetts in the United States at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

She became a professor of physics at the National Taiwan University.[1] From 1981 to 1983 she was the head of the department of physics at the university. As of 2019 she is the only woman to hold this role.[2] Whilst she was in charge, she arranged an audit of the department, and it was found that a radioactive source that was meant to be stored safely was missing. The newspapers reported the problem, and it was only when national bodies became involved that the radium - beryllium neutron source was found.[3] She wanted to concentrate on teaching, so she stood down from her management role. She continued to teach for twenty years, and she was cited as a role model for other women to study physics.[4]

She retired and died in 2019[5] at National Taiwan University Hospital.

Selected works

In addition she has a large number of patents in her name.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 國立臺灣大學物理學系. www.phys.ntu.edu.tw. 2019-12-11.
  2. Web site: 國立臺灣大學物理學系. www.phys.ntu.edu.tw. 2019-12-11.
  3. https://web.phys.ntu.edu.tw/physhistory/spacetime/vol_22/v22_p22.pdf report in Chinese about the missing radiation source
  4. Web site: 你的公共電視-Taiwan Public Television Service Online. web.pts.org.tw. 2019-12-11.
  5. https://www.ps-taiwan.org/news.php?id=12&fid=1&nid=463 Announcement in Chinese by the Taiwan Physical Society
  6. Lin. Ching Liang. Yoshida. Shiro. 1964-12-01. Theory of Two Nucleon Stripping Reactions. I—(d, α) and (α, d) Reactions—. Progress of Theoretical Physics. en. 32. 6. 885–903. 10.1143/PTP.32.885. 0033-068X. 1964PThPh..32..885L. free.
  7. Web site: Ching-Liang Lin Inventions, Patents and Patent Applications - Justia Patents Search. patents.justia.com. 2019-12-11.