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Léon Van Hove

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Name
  
Leon Hove

Role
  
Physicist

Awards
  
Max Planck Medal


Leon Van Hove

Born
  
10 February 1924 (
1924-02-10
)
Brussels, Belgium

Other names
  
Leon Charles Prudent van Hove

Occupation
  
Belgian physicist and former Director-General of CERN

Died
  
September 2, 1990, Geneva, Switzerland

Education
  
Universite libre de Bruxelles

Books
  
Problems in Quantum Theory of Many-particle Systems

Murray Gell-Mann - George Zweig and Leon van Hove (114/200)


Léon Charles Prudent Van Hove (Brussels, 10 February 1924 – Geneva, 2 September 1990) was a Belgian physicist and a former Director General of CERN. He developed a scientific career spanning mathematics, solid state physics, elementary particle and nuclear physics to cosmology.

Contents

Biography

Van Hove studied mathematics and physics at the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). In 1946 he received his PhD in mathematics at the ULB. From 1949 to 1954 he worked at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey by virtue of his meeting with Robert Oppenheimer. Later he worked at the Brookhaven National Laboratory and was a professor and Director of the Theoretical Physics Institute at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands. In the 1950s he laid the theoretical foundations for the analysis of inelastic neutron scattering in terms of the dynamic structure factor. In 1958, he was awarded the Francqui Prize in Exact Sciences. In 1959, he received an invitation to become the head of the Theory Division at CERN in Geneva. In 1975 Prof. Van Hove was appointed CERN Director-General, with John Adams, responsible for the research activities of the Organization. The LEP project was proposed during Van Hove's tenure as Director General.

Awards

  • Francqui Prize, 1958
  • Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics, 1962
  • References

    Léon Van Hove Wikipedia