Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

W W Hansen

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
U.S.

Known for
  
microwave electronics

Fields
  
accelerator physics

Name
  
W. Hansen


Institutions
  
Hansen Laboratories

Role
  
Physicist

Alma mater
  
Stanford University

Education
  
Stanford University

Born
  
May 27, 1909 Fresno, California (
1909-05-27
)

Died
  
May 23, 1949, Palo Alto, California, United States

William Webster Hansen (May 27, 1909 – May 23, 1949) was an American physicist and professor. He was one of the founders of the technology of microwave electronics.

Contents

Biography

Hansen's father who was an immigrant from Denmark, was a hardware store owner in Fresno, California. He encouraged his son's early talent in mathematics and enthusiasm for electronics. He entering Stanford University at the age of 16. he earned his B.A. in 1929, and his Ph.D. in 1933.

Hansen went on to become interested in the problem of accelerating electrons for X-ray experiments, using oscillating fields, rather than large static voltages. At the University of California, Berkeley, Ernest Lawrence and his assistant David H. Sloan, had worked on an accelerator driven by a resonant coil. Hansen proposed replacing the coil with a cavity resonator. In 1937, brothers Russel H. Varian and Sigurd F. Varian came to Stanford to work on the foundations of what was to become radar. Hansen exploited some of the Varian's work to develop the klystron and during the years 1937 to 1940, along with collaborators such as John R. Woodyard, founded the field of microwave electronics. In 1941, he moved his team to the Sperry Gyroscope Company where they spent the war years employing their expertise in radar applications and in other problems.

Returning to Stanford in 1945 as a full professor, he embarked on the construction of a series of linear accelerators based on klystron technology and of GeV performance. Along with the Varian brothers and Edward Ginzton, he co-founded Varian Associates in 1948. Sadly, he was never to see the completion of the klystron project. He died at age 39 in Palo Alto, California of berylliosis and fibrosis of the lungs, caused by inhaling the beryllium used in his research. In 1947, the Hansen Experimental Physics Laboratory (HEPL) was founded as a facility at Stanford University. The facility is designed to promote interdisciplinary enterprises across different branches of science and was named in his honor.

Personal life

In October 1938, William Webster Hansen married Betsy Ross, who was the younger daughter of Perley Ason Ross, professor of physics at Stanford. Shortly after his death Betsy committed suicide. Their only child died six months after his birth during the fall of 1947.

Honors

  • IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award of the Institute of Radio Engineers (1944)
  • President's Certificate of Merit (1948)
  • Member of the National Academy of Sciences (1949)
  • Wilson, R. R.; Littauer, R. (1960). Accelerators: Machines of Nuclear Physics. New York City: Doubleday & Company. 
  • Ginzton, Edward L. (1975). "The $100 idea". IEEE Spectrum: Feb. 30–39. 
  • Bloch, F.; Hansen, W. W.; Packard, Martin (1 February 1946). "Nuclear Induction". Physical Review. 69: 127. Bibcode:1946PhRv...69..127B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.69.127. 
  • References

    W. W. Hansen Wikipedia