Frederick P. Cowan, Ph.D, was a health physicist and head of the Instrumentation and Health Physics Department at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
F. P. Cowan grew up in the Boston, Massachusetts area. He attended Bowdoin College, then went on to Harvard University to complete his Ph.D.. After Harvard, Cowan went on to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to teach.
During World War II Dr. Cowan worked in radar countermeasures. This was followed by a stint at the Chrysler Corporation and finally he ended up at Brookhaven National Laboratory to lead the Health Physics Division.
PresidentIn the midyear issue of Science the announcement came of the formation of a new national scientific organization for health physicists at the 3 day Health Physics Conference at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio on 14 June 1955. The organization was temporarily named "Health Physics Society", and Karl Z. Morgan of the Health Physics Division of Oak Ridge National Laboratory was elected interim president. Other interim officers were:
Frederick P. Cowan, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, N.Y., vice president, andElda E. Anderson, director of the education and training department of the Health Physics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, secretary-treasurer.Talks regarding the formation of a professional society had been ongoing for several years. The health physicists had decided to form an independent organization rather than attach to an existing group.
Directors of the Health Physics Society included:
Herbert Mermagen, University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y.Edgar Charles Barnes, manager of industrial hygiene, Westinghouse Atomic Power Division, Bettis Field, Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaJohn W. 'Jack' Healy, General Electric Co., Hanford, WashingtonWilliam Taylor Ham, professor of biophysics, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VirginiaC. Maurice Patterson, DuPont Atomic Energy Plant, Aiken, S.C.G. W. C. Tait, Health Physics Branch, Atomic Energy Co. of Canada, Ltd., Chalk River, Ontario, CanadaFrancis J. Bradley, superintendent of radiation safety at Ohio State University and organizer of the first Health Physics Society ConferenceWilliam E. Nolan, Radiation Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CaliforniaWalter Dunhan Claus, (annual salary $12,000), Division of Biology and Medicine, Biophysics Branch, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Washington, D.C.John E. Pickering, department of radiobiology, School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Air Force Base, TexasChairmanChairman, Examination PanelCommittee III, External ExposureHealth Physics and Medical Aspects of a Strontium 90 Inhalation IncidentHealth Physics Program for the Brookhaven CosmotronRadiation Safety in a Research LaboratoryP32 Spill of April 23, 1957Bioassay Data and Analysis Relating to the P32 Spill of April 23, 1957A Preliminary Report on Health Physics Problems at the Brookhaven Alternating Gradient SynchrotronPersonnel Dosimetry of Very-High Energy RadiationsSome Dosimetry Problems of the Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS)Health Physics Program for the Brookhaven National Laboratory SynchrotronsHealth Physics Problems of High Energy AcceleratorsEveryday radiation