His name crops up very occasionally - but he remains an enigma in many respects. However - Zwicky, for all his apparent madness - was without doubt a genius with amazing foresight...
The oldest of three children, Fritz Zwicky was born in Varna –
Bulgaria, on February 14th 1898.
His father was Swiss and his mother, Czech.
At the age of six, in 1904, Fritz was sent to
live with his grandparents in the Zwicky’s family home in the Glarus area of
Switzerland, with the intention of studying commerce. However, over the years he became more
interested in maths and physics. Later
he studied mathematics and experimental physics at the Swiss Federal Institute
of Technology.
In 1925 he emigrated to
America, where he received an ‘International Fellowship’ from the Rockefeller
Foundation, and took up a position with the Californian Institute of Technology
(CalTech).
America provided Zwicky with numerous career opportunities, of which he
made the most. In 1942, he was appointed
Professor of Astronomy at CalTech. He
also worked as a research director and consultant for Aerojet Engineering
Corporation (1943-1961), and a staff member at the Mt Wilson and Palomar
Observatory for most of his career.
Known as the ‘Father of the Modern Jet Engine’, he is acknowledged for
developing some of the earliest prototype jet engines.
An article in TIME – March 14th
1949 – proclaimed Zwicky as the inventor of the Underwater Jet (U.S. Patent 2461797) – the Two Piece Jet Thrust Motor (US
Patent US2426526) – and the Inverted
Hydro Pulse (US
Patent US3044252).
These patents
can still be viewed, complete with original drawings, on the Internet today. All together, Zwicky held around fifty
patents related to jets and thrust. He
is also recognised as performing well-respected research in gaseous ionization,
crystals, and the physics of solid state, slow electrons and thermodynamics.
As an indication of Zwicky’s range of abilities, it is worth mentioning
a method for investigating the totality of relationships contained in
multi-dimensional, usually nonquantifiable problem complexes.
BAFFLED by that concept? So was I - Morphological Analysis –
to give the method its correct name, was ‘a way of thinking about any problem’.
Zwicky developed his method to apply to situations arising during World War II. Unfortunately – his system bewildered both
government and military officials alike.
Nevertheless, his analytical method - now computer assisted - is still used today in a variety of areas.
Naturally, a man of such inexhaustible aptitude also has a very
distinguished list of accomplishments in the world of cosmology. As mentioned above – he was known as the ‘Father
of the Jet Engine’ – in addition, he is also referred to as the ‘Father of Dark
Matter’!
Whilst other astronomers
assumed the distribution of galaxies to be fairly uniform throughout the
galaxy, Zwicky tended to analyse situations from a physicist’s point of
view. He is recorded in a Swiss journal
as arguing the case for virtually all galaxies being in clusters.
Furthermore, he proposed that these clusters
appeared to be moving in relation to one another at rates that would violate
the laws of gravity – unless one accepted the unexplained presence of a vast
amount of - Dunkie Materie – Dark
Matter. In so many
ways, and as so often happens, he was a man far ahead of his time.
Zwicky, with a colleague, Walter Baade, established and encouraged the
use of the first Schmidt telescopes – used in a mountain-top observatory in
1935.
In 1934, he and Baade also created
the term ‘supernova’. They hypothesised
that supernova were the transition of normal stars into neutron stars, as well
as the origin of cosmic rays. In pursuit
of his theories, Zwicky proceeded to hunt for supernovae – in total he found
one-hundred and twenty over a fifty-two year period.
In 1938, it was Baade who put forward the
idea of using supernovae as Standard
Candles to estimate distances in deep space.
Around the same period – 1937 – Zwicky speculated that galaxy clusters
could act as gravitational lenses – as predicted by none other than Albert
Einstein. This prediction was finally
confirmed in the year 1979.
Between the years 1961 and 1968, Fritz Zwicky committed a substantial
amount of time to his search for galaxies.
This protracted search culminated in the production of a six volume
Catalogue of Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies.
These catalogues were all published in Pasadena, by CalTech.
With such an obvious array of achievements – which this article scarcely
scratches the surface of - one might have imagined ‘Fritz Zwicky’ to be a name that came easily to mind. However, in spite of his triumphs, he
received very few public accolades during his lifetime, or since.
History records Zwicky not so much as an
inventor, physicist, scientist, astronomer and cosmologist extraordinaire – but
rather as an ‘oddball astronomer’. He stands charged with calling a close
colleague a Nazi and for claiming credit for everything that happened in
cosmology after Einstein! He is
remembered for attacking his peers both in print and in person!
He was described by the media of that period
as a curmudgeon; that being a
bad-tempered, difficult and cantankerous person! At the Mount Wilson Observatory, he was renowned
for referring to other staff members as ‘spherical bastards’ – clarifying his
remark – he would add – ‘you are bastards, whichever way I look at you’.
One famous story relates to the time when Zwicky’s laboratory was due
an official visit from high-ranking members of the military. Zwicky is said to have banned them entry to
the laboratory, on the grounds that the generals and admirals were not
scientists, and therefore would not understand what they were looking at!
Like so many brilliant minds,
Zwicky was obviously quite eccentric and clearly had a collection of rather
unsavoury idiosyncrasies. Twice married
and lacking it seems, the most basic of social skills, Fritz Zwicky somehow
also managed to gain a reputation as a humanitarian.
He demonstrated a genuine concern for wider
society, and in the aftermath of World War II collected literally tons of books
on astronomy and other subjects. These
books were shipped to the war-torn scientific libraries of both Europe and
Asia.
He is also known to have had a long-standing association with the
charitable Pestalozzi Foundation – supporting orphanages. In 1955, Zwicky received a gold medal in acknowledgment
of his services to this foundation.
In the 1960s Zwicky considered how the entire solar system might be moved like a huge spaceship to travel to other stars. Only a man of Zwicky’s intellect could propose anything as outrageous and not suffer widespread public ridicule.
His honours include the 1949 Presidential Medal of Freedom, for work on rocket propulsion during World War II, and being made professor emeritus at CalTech in 1968.
In 1972, he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society, for his distinguished contribution to astronomy and cosmology; with particular mention of his work on neutron stars, dark matter, and the cataloguing of galaxies.
Fritz Zwicky passed away in Pasadena USA on February 8th, 1974 – six days before his 76th birthday. He was buried in Mollis, Switzerland, the village where he grew up. The asteroid 1803 Zwicky and lunar crater Zwicky are both named in his honour.
No comments:
Post a Comment