Paul Marmet | |
Birth Date: | 20 May 1932 |
Birth Place: | Lévis, Quebec, Canada |
Death Place: | Ottawa, Ontario |
President of the Canadian Association of Physicists | |
Term Start: | 1981 |
Term End: | 1982[1] |
Predecessor: | Cecil Costain |
Successor: | A.R. Crawford |
Fields: | Physics |
Alma Mater: | Université Laval |
Academic Advisors: | Larkin Kerwin |
Known For: | Low-energy Monoenergetic Electron Spectrometer |
Spouse: | Jacqueline Marmet |
Children: | Dr. Louis Marmet |
Paul Marmet, (20 May 1932 – 20 May 2005) was a Canadian physicist, inventor, author, and professor at Laval University in Quebec City, Canada, who served as the President of the Canadian Association of Physicists.
Marmet is notable for developing a novel high-resolution electron velocity selector, a scientific instrument which became widely used by scientists around the world.
Early in his career, Marmet developed a high-resolution electron selector with his mentor Larkin Kerwin, a scientific instrument for studying ionic electronic states.[2]
Along with a mass spectrometer Marmet developed, the novel instrument had an energy resolution superior to then-available instruments and has been used widely by scientists studying electron scattering, which led to the discovery of enhanced vibrational excitation in nitrogen and of Feshbach resonances.[3] [4]
Using the Marmet-Kerwin electron selector, Marmet and his research group discovered atomic and molecular states excited by electron impact but not by photons, such as doubly excited states that disobey spectroscopic selection rules. The group also found negative-ion resonances in which the incident electron temporarily attaches to the target molecule.[5] [6]
After receiving his physics BSc in 1956 and DSc in 1960 from Laval University and entering the Physics faculty as an assistant professor at his alma mater school in 1961, Marmet became a full professor in 1967 at age 34.[7]
Starting in 1967, he was director of the Laboratory for Atomic and Molecular Physics at Laval University, serving until 1982.
Between 1981 and 1982, Marmet served as President of the Canadian Association of Physicists.
From 1983 to 1990, he was a senior researcher at the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics of the National Research Council Canada in Ottawa. While there, Marmet helped the University of Ottawa modernize its Physics education program.[8]
In addition to the prominent role he played in developing the Canadian Space Program, Paul Marmet also served on the executive committee of the Atomic Energy Control Board of Canada (now the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission).
In his later years, Marmet became an outspoken critic of the Copenhagen Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, the theory of relativity, and the Big Bang cosmological model. He maintained a website devoted to his view.[9]
Marmet was one of 34 signers of An Open Letter to the Scientific Community advocating against the Big Bang cosmology.[10]
He also held an opposing view on cosmological redshift[11] and advocated tired light cosmology.
Marmet's dissent about theoretical physics triggered a draconian reaction from the Canadian government, which immediately canceled all of his research grants, although they were not in theoretical but experimental physics.
The attack was followed by a reaction from the Laval University administration, which forced Marmet to retire and even evicted him from his office.[12]
In addition to his activities as a member of the first Associate Committee on Astronomy of the National Research Council since 1971 and his playing a crucial role in negotiations for the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope,[13] Marmet was also promoting the development of Quebec's first astronomical research telescope.
Paul Marmet published more than 100 original research papers and numerous books, websites, and animated demonstrations for the teaching of Physics.