Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jens Rud Nielsen

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Residence
  
Denmark, United States

Spouse
  
Gertrude Siegmund


Name
  
Jens Nielsen

Fields
  
Physics

Jens Rud Nielsen John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Jens Rud Nielsen

Born
  
22 September 1894 Copenhagen, Denmark (
1894-09-22
)

Children
  
John Rud Nielsen, Thomas Rud Nielsen, Mary Ruth Wilson

Died
  
April 20, 1979, Norman, Oklahoma, United States

Education
  
California Institute of Technology (1924), University of Copenhagen (1919), University of Copenhagen (1914)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Jens Rud Nielsen (22 September 1894 – 20 April 1979) was born in Copenhagen and was a physicist at the University of Oklahoma. He immigrated to the United States in 1922. He was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1931.

Contents

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Scientific accomplishments

Nielsen entered the University of Copenhagen in the fall semester of 1913, where world-renowned physicist Niels Bohr was a professor. Nielsen attended many of Bohr's lectures during his time at Copenhagen. Nielsen resigned from the University of Copenhagen in 1922 and was employed at the University of Oklahoma in 1924. Eventually, in 1931, Nielsen went back to Copenhagen and spent two years at Bohr's Institute.

At the University of Oklahoma he was told to create a research program for the University's physics program. Due to lack of space and financial problems, Nielsen was forced to use heat tunnels and old washrooms in the place of laboratories. During his time at the University of Oklahoma, Nielsen supervised half of the physics PH.D. students. Eventually, Nielsen's research program became the center of the creation of the University of Oklahoma National Research Institute.

In 1943, while he was still working for the University of Oklahoma, Nielsen began building a large Raman infrared spectrometer for the Naval Research Laboratory. It was completed several years later, and for a time was known as the most powerful prism infrared spectrometer. Nielsen stayed in contact with the Naval Research Laboratory for several years after this project. Together they investigated the vibrational spectra of fluorocarbons and fluorinated hydrocarbons.

Awards and honors

On November 16, 1971 Nielsen was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame. George Lynn Cross, the University of Oklahoma president, referred to him as "Oklahoma's most distinguished scientist." After his retirement from the University of Oklahoma in 1965 the Physics and Astronomy department building was named Nielsen Hall in his honor. He was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1931. And in 1922-1923 he was awarded the American-Scandinavian fellowship from The American-Scandinavian Foundation. Nielsen was the editor of the Journal of the Optical Society of America.

References

Jens Rud Nielsen Wikipedia