- Pais, Abraham
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▪ 2001Dutch-born American physicist and science historian (b. May 19, 1918, Amsterdam, Neth.—d. July 28, 2000, Copenhagen, Den.), was a prominent theoretical physicist who in later life wrote widely acclaimed biographies of Albert Einstein and Niels Bohr. Pais earned a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Amsterdam in 1941. A Jew, he was forced into hiding after Germany overtook The Netherlands during World War II and was briefly imprisoned in 1945. After the war Pais worked at the Institute of Theoretical Physics, Copenhagen, where he was an assistant to Bohr; later he was recruited to work at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J., where he met Einstein. Pais's work involved studying the behaviour of subatomic particles. In 1952 he explained a process he termed “associated production,” by which certain particles are produced rapidly but decay slowly, and in 1955, with colleague Murray Gell-Mann, he published a theoretical paper on the laws of quantum mechanics that led physicists James Cronin and Val Fitch to conduct experiments in 1964 that won them a Nobel Prize. Pais joined the faculty of Rockefeller University, New York City, in 1963; he was appointed professor emeritus at the university in 1988. His biography of Einstein, entitled Subtle Is the Lord and considered by some critics to be the best biography of the scientist ever written, appeared in 1982. His book on Bohr, Niels Bohr's Times: In Physics, Philosophy, and Polity, was published in 1991. Among Pais's other works were Einstein Lived Here: Essays for the Layman (1994), A Tale of Two Continents: A Physicist's Life in a Turbulent World (1997), and The Genius of Science: A Portrait Gallery of Twentieth-Century Physicists (2000).
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Universalium. 2010.