Richard Casten | |
Birth Date: | 1 November 1941 |
Birth Place: | New York City, U.S. |
Fields: | |
Workplaces: | Niels Bohr Institute Los Alamos National Laboratory Brookhaven National Laboratory Yale University |
Alma Mater: | College of the Holy Cross (BS) Yale University (MS, PhD) |
Thesis Title: | Collective Nuclear Structure Studies in the Osmium Nuclei |
Thesis Url: | https://wlab.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/Wright%20Lab%20Theses%201965%20-%20present/Casten_Richard_Collective%20Nuclear%20Structure%20Studies%20In%20The%20Osmium%20Nuclei%201967.pdf |
Thesis Year: | 1967 |
Doctoral Advisor: | D. Allan Bromley Jack Greenberg |
Awards: | Humboldt Prize (1983) Tom W. Bonner Prize in Nuclear Physics (2011) |
Richard Francis Xavier Casten (born November 1, 1941) is an American nuclear physicist. He serves as the D. Allan Bromley Professor Emeritus of Physics at Yale University, where he was also the director of the Wright Nuclear Structure Laboratory from 1995 to 2008.[1] He is known for his research in nuclear structure and radioactive nuclear beams. He is also known for Casten's triangle, which was introduced in 1981.[2]
Casten was born on November 1, 1941, in New York City. His father was a Jewish surgeon from New York and his mother was a Catholic homemaker. Casten was raised in Manhattan and attended the Quaker Friends Seminary, where he took chemistry classes and decided to pursue physics.[3]
Wishing to get out of the city, Casten enrolled at the College of the Holy Cross as a physics major and became a member of its honors program. The college's focus on a liberal arts education allowed him to take courses in history and philosophy, which he later recalled as having "an effect on my whole research career". He graduated from Holy Cross with a Bachelor of Science (B.S.), magna cum laude, in 1963.[4] [5]
After graduation, Casten attended Yale University for graduate school with the intention to study physics under D. Allan Bromley. Under Bromley, he studied Coulomb excitation in osmium isotopes. He obtained his Master of Science (M.S.) from Yale in 1964 and his Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) from the university in 1967.[6] Casten had begun his dissertation in September 1963 and completed his thesis defense in August 1967; his doctoral committee included Bromley, Jack Greenberg, and Charles K. Bockelman.[7] His dissertation, titled "Collective nuclear structure studies in the osmium nuclei", was the first thesis to be based upon research done with Yale's MP-1 tandem accelerator.[8] [9] [10]
From 1967 to 1969, Casten was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Niels Bohr Institute of the University of Copenhagen. He was drawn to the institute due to his research in collective effects, and the two leading scientists of the field were Aage Bohr and Ben Mottelson, who were based there; Bohr and Mottelson would later win the Nobel Prize in Physics. In addition, the Niels Bohr Institute also based Russian physicist Vilen Strutinsky. Casten learned Danish while in Denmark and recalled his research at the institute as being on "single particle, individual nucleon behavior".
Casten went to the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) for additional postdoctoral research from 1969 to 1971. Thereafter, he became a physicist at the Nuclear Structure Group of the Brookhaven National Laboratory from 1971 to 1981, then a senior scientist from 1981 to 1997. Casten was the group leader of the Nuclear Structure Group from 1981 to 1996. In 1995, he assumed a position as the director of the A. W. Wright Nuclear Structure Laboratory (WNSL) at Yale University and was made a professor of physics that same year. He stepped down as director of the laboratory in 2008. In the summer of 2011, WNSL's accelerator was shut down.[11]
Casten was a full professor at Yale until 2008, when he received the appointment as the university's D. Allan Bromley Professor of Physics. He served in that capacity until 2015, when he retired with emeritus status.[12] As a professor, Casten taught graduate courses in introductory and advanced nuclear physics.[13] He has been an associate editor for Physical Review C for experimental nuclear structure. He held visiting positions at the Institut Laue–Langevin, at the University of Cologne's Institute for Nuclear Physics, at the CERN/ISOLDE facility, and at Stony Brook University.[14] He chaired the United States Department of Energy's Nuclear Science Advisory Committee (NSAC) from 2003 to 2005, and was also chair of the American Physical Society's Division of Nuclear Physics (DNP) in 2008 and of the FRIB Science Advisory Committee from 2009 to 2012.
Casten was elected in 1981 to be a fellow of the American Physical Society (APS).[15] In 1987, he was elected to be a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[16] In 1983, he received a Humboldt Award for Senior U.S. Scientists. He was awarded honorary doctorates by the University of Bucharest and the University of Surrey.[8]
In 2009, Casten received the Mentoring Award from the Nuclear Physics Section of the APS for "his outstanding commitment to mentoring women in nuclear science and preparing them for leadership roles".[17] In 2011, he received the Tom W. Bonner Prize in Nuclear Physics "for providing critical insight into the evolution of nuclear structure with varying proton and neutron numbers and the discovery of a variety of dynamic symmetries in nuclei".[8] [18] [19]