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Dudley R. Herschbach
Frank B. Baird, Jr. Professor of Science
Harvard University
Dudley Herschbach was born in
San Jose, California (1932) and received his B.S. degree in
Mathematics (1954) and M.S. in Chemistry (1955) at Stanford
University, followed by an A.M. degree in Physics (1956) and
Ph.D. in Chemical Physics (1958) at Harvard. After a term as
Junior Fellow in the Society of Fellows at Harvard (1957-1959),
he was a member of the Chemical Faculty at the University of
California, Berkeley (1959-1963), before returning to Harvard as
Professor of Chemistry (1963), where he is now Baird Professor of
Science (since 1976). He has served as Chairman of the Chemical
Physics program (1964-1977) and the Chemistry Department
(1977-1980), and Co-Master with his wife Georgene of Currier
House (1981-1986). His teaching includes graduate courses in
quantum mechanics, chemical kinetics, molecular spectroscopy, and
collision theory, as well as undergraduate courses in physical
chemistry and general chemistry for freshmen, his most
challenging assignment. He is engaged in several efforts to
improve K-12 science education and public understanding of
science. He serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees of Science
Service, which publishes Science News and conducts the Intel
Science Talent Search and the Intel International Science and
Engineering Fair.
He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
the National Academy of Sciences, the American Philosophical
Society, and the Royal Chemical Society of Great Britain. His
awards include the Pure Chemistry Prize of the American Chemical
Society (1965), the Linus Pauling Medal (1978), the Michael
Polanyi Medal (1981), the Irving Langmuir Prize of the Americal
Physical Society (1983), the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1986),
jointly with Yuan T. Lee and John C. Polanyi, the National Medal
of Science (1991), the Jaroslav Heyrovsky Medal (1992), the
Sierra Nevada Distinguished Chemist Award (1993), the Kosolapoff
Award of the ACS (1994), the William Walker Prize (1994); and
named by Chemical Engineering News among 75 leading contributors
to the chemical enterprise in the past 75 years (1998), and the
Council of Scientific Society President's Award for Support of
Science (1999).
Professor Herschbach has published over 400 papers. His
current research is devoted to methods of orienting molecules for
studies of collision stereodynamics, means of slowing and
trapping molecules in order to examine chemistry at long
deBroglie wavelengths, reactions in catalytic supersonic
expansions, and a dimensional scaling approach to strongly
correlated many-particle interactions, in electronic structure
and Bose-Einstein condensates.
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