Brief Autobiography of Dudley Herschbach (From
Les Prix Nobel 1986)
I was born in San Jose, California on June 18, 1932, the first
of six children of Robert and Dorothy Herschbach. My father was then
a building contractor and later a rabbit breeder. His family had lived
in this part of California for three generations; although our surname
comes from a pair of villages in the Rhine Valley, most of his immediate
ancestors were of English or Irish origin. My mother's family had
moved to San Jose from Illinois when she was a young girl; most of
her known ancestors were of German, Dutch, or French origin.
In my boyhood we lived in what was then a rural area of fruit orchards,
only a few miles outside San Jose. For years I milked a cow, fed
the pigs and chickens, and during summers picked prunes, apricots,
and walnuts. From an early age I loved to read but was also very
involved in outdoor activities, scouting, and sports. My interest
in science was excited at age nine by an article on astronomy in
National Geographic; the author was Donald Menzel of the Harvard
Observatory. For the next few years, I regularly made star maps
and snuck out at night to make observations from a locust tree in
our back yard.
When I attended Campbell High School, I took all the science and
mathematics courses offered. Chemistry I found at first puzzling
and then most intriguing, thanks to John Meischke, a superb teacher.
At the time, I was at least as interested in football and other
sports; perhaps that presaged my later pursuit of molecular collisions.
Like most of my classmates, I did not expect to attend college;
none of my known relatives had graduated from a university. However,
my teachers and coaches presumed I would go. Indeed, I received
offers of football scholarships from some universities to which
I had not even applied for admission.
I entered Stanford University in 1950 and found a new world with
vastly broader intellectual horizons than I'd imagined. Although
I gladly played freshman football, I had turned down an athletic
scholarship in favor of an academic one. This permitted me to give
up varsity football after spring practice, in reaction to a dictum
by the head coach that we not take any lab courses during the season.
By then the lab and library already were for me much the more exciting
playground. My chief mentor at Stanford was Harold Johnston, who
imbued me with his passion for chemical kinetics. Many other subjects
and professors were also compelling and I took up to ten courses
a term. Mathematics was especially appealing; I so admired the teaching
of Harold Bacon, George Polya, Gabor Szego, and Bob Weinstock that
I simply took all the courses they gave. I received the B.S. in
mathematics in 1954 and the M.S. in chemistry in 1955. My Master's
thesis, done under the direction of Harold Johnston, was titled:
"Theoretical Pre-exponential Factors for Bimolecular Reactions."
It employed the transition-state theory of Henry Eyring and Michael
Polanyi and treated the proportionality factor in the most venerable
formula of chemical kinetics, the Arrhenius equation.
My graduate study continued at Harvard, where again I found an
exhilerating academic environment. I received the A.M. in Physics
in 1956 and the Ph.D. in Chemical Physics in 1958. My Doctoral Thesis,
done under E. Bright Wilson, Jr., was titled: "Internal Rotation
and Microwave Spectroscopy". This presented theoretical calculations
and experiments dealing with hindered internal rotation of methyl
groups. The height of the hindering barrier could be accurately
determined because the observed spectra were very sensitive to tunneling
between equivalent potential mimima. Much that shaped my later research
I learned from Bright Wilson and other faculty, especially George
Kistiakowsky and Bill Klemperer, or from fellow students, especially
Jerry Swalen, Victor Laurie and Larry Krisher. My thesis work also
benefited from visits of several months to take spectra at the National
Research Council in Ottawa and to compute Mathieu functions at Los
Alamos National Laboratory. During 1957-1959, while a Junior Fellow
in the Society of Fellows at Harvard, I developed plans for molecular
beam studies of elementary chemical reactions.
This work was launched at the University of California at Berkeley,
where I was appointed an Assistant Professor of Chemistry in 1959
and became an Associate Professor in 1961. The chief experiments
dealt with reactions of alkali atoms with alkyl iodides, systems
studied forty years before by Michael Polanyi. Rather simple apparatus
sufficed to attain single-collision conditions and revealed that
the product molecules emerged with a preferred range of recoil angle
and translational energy. The possibility of resolving such features
of reaction dynamics encouraged other workers pursuing kindred experiments
and fostered an outburst of new theory. My early work thus interacted
particularly with that of Richard Bernstein, Sheldon Datz, Ned Greene,
John Polanyi, John Ross, and Peter Toennies.
This new field developed rapidly after I returned to Harvard in
1963 as Professor of Chemistry. We studied a wide range of alkali
reactions and found several prototype modes of reaction dynamics
which could be correlated with the electronic structure of the target
molecule. Processes involving abrupt, impulsive bond exchange or
formation of a persistent complex comprise the two major categories.
In 1967 Yuan Lee joined our group as a postdoctoral fellow and led
the construction of a "supermachine". This employed greatly
augmented differential pumping, sophisticated mass spectroscopy
using ion counting techniques adapted from nuclear physics, and
supersonic beam sources advocated by enterprising chemical engineers,
especially John Fenn and Jim Anderson. The new machine greatly extended
the scope of crossed-beam experiments, taking us "beyond the
alkali age". In particular, we were then able to study the
same reactions elucidated by John Polanyi with his complementary
method of infrared chemiluminescence. This much enhanced the interpretation
of reaction dynamics in terms of electronic structure.
The most representative descriptions of the work recognized by
the Nobel Prize probably appeared in:
Adv. Chem. Phys. 10, 319-393 (1966).
Disc. Faraday Soc. 44, 108-122 (1967).
J. Chem. Phys. 56, 769-788 (1972).
Faraday Disc. Chem. Soc. 55, 233-251 (1973).
Pure and Applied Chem. 47, 61-73 (1976).
Mol. Phys. 35, 541-573 (1978).
J. Phys. Chem. 87, 2781-2786 (1983).
In current research we are developing a method for simultaneous
measurement of three or four vector properties of reactive collisions,
such as reactant or product relative velocities or rotational angular
momenta. Theory has shown that data on correlations among these
vectors can undo much of the averaging over initial molecular orientations
and impact parameters and thereby reveal more incisive information
about reaction dynamics. Other studies deal with processes akin
to liquid-phase reactions by solvating reactant molecules during
a supersonic expansion. We are also examining bulk liquid interactions
by means of vibrational frequency shifts induced by high pressure;
this offers a way to determine solute-solvent intermolecular forces.
In addition to theoretical studies related to these experiments,
we are pursuing a new approach to electronic structure calculations
which exploits exact solutions obtainable in the limit of one- and
infintie-dimension. For two-electron systems this has given high
accuracy for the electron correlation energy with far less effort
than conventional methods.
Other biographical items pertaining to Harvard include my appointment
in 1976 as Frank B. Baird, Jr. Professor of Science; service as
Chairman of the Chemical Physics program (1964-1977) and the Chemistry
Department (1977-1980), as a member of the Faculty Council (1980-1983),
and as Co Master with my wife of Currier House (1981-1986). At Currier
we were in effect reincarnated as undergraduates to preside over
an extremely lively community of 400 students and tutors. Typical
of many memorable episodes was the night we were summoned to a student's
room to meet a seal in the bathtub. My teaching includes graduate
courses in quantum mechanics, chemical kinetics, molecular spectroscopy,
and collision theory. In recent years I have given undergraduate
courses in physical chemistry and especially general chemistry for
freshmen, my most challenging assignment.
Away from Harvard, I have been a Visiting Professor at Göttingen
University in 1963, a Guggenheim Fellow at Freiburg University in
1968, a Visiting Fellow of the Joins Institute of Laboratory Astrophysics
in 1969, and a Sherman Fairchild Scholar at the California Institute
of Technology in 1976. I also serve as a consultant to Aerodyne
Corporation, the Fluorocarbon Research Panel, and Los Alamos National
Laboratory. I was appointed an Exxon Faculty Fellow in 1981 and
visit regularly the Corporate Research Laboratory in New Jersey
to participate in projects there. I have also served since 1980
as an Associate Editor of the Journal of Physical Chemistry.
Other honors include election to the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences in 1964 and to the National Academy of Sciences in 1967;
the Pure Chemistry Prize of the American Chemical Society in 1965,
the Linus Pauling Medal in 1978, the Michael Polanyi Medal in 1981,
and the Irving Langmuir Prize in Chemical Physics in 1983. The University
of Toronto bestowed in 1977 the D. Sc., honoris causa.
Chemistry also brought my wife Georgene Botyos to Harvard as an
organic graduate student. We were married in 1964 and our daughters
Lisa and Brenda arrived as harbingers before she received her Ph.D.
in 1968. Georgene is now Assistant Dean of Harvard College, a multifaceted
position that often requires delicate personal chemistry. Lisa is
now a junior in humanities at Stanford, this year enjoying the overseas
option at Oxford. Brenda is a junior in chemistry at Harvard, already
pursuing research. Our home is in Lincoln, Massachusetts.
Internet: http://www.chem.harvard.edu/
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