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Ronald Wilfred Gurney

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Name
  
Ronald Gurney


Role
  
Physicist

Died
  
1953, New York City, New York, United States

Ronald Wilfred (or Wilfrid) Gurney (1898, Cheltenham, England – 14 April 1953, New York, New York) was a British theoretical physicist and research pupil of William Lawrence Bragg at the Victoria University of Manchester during the 1920s and 1930s, Bristol University during the 1930s and later in the USA, where he died.

Contents

Radioactive decay processes

Whilst at the Palmer Physical Laboratory at Princeton University from 1926–28, he discovered alpha decay via quantum tunnelling, together with Edward Condon and independently of George Gamow. In the early 1900s, radioactive materials were known to have characteristic exponential decay rates or half lives. At the same time, radiation emissions were known to have certain characteristic energies. By 1928, Gamow had solved the theory of the alpha decay of a nucleus via quantum tunnelling and the problem was also solved independently by Gurney and Condon. Gurney and Condon did not, however, produce the quantitative results achieved by Gamow in his work.

Books

  • Elementary quantum mechanics, Cambridge [Eng.] The University Press, 1934.
  • Introduction to statistical mechanics, New York, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1949.
  • Electronic Processes in Ionic Crystals (1940, physics; with N.F. Mott)
  • References

    Ronald Wilfred Gurney Wikipedia