Douglas Osheroff
Nobel Prize in Physics 1996
Research Interests
Research efforts center around studies of quantum fluids and solids and glasses at ultra-low temperatures. Current work in quantum fluids and solids includes studies of transport properties in nuclear magnetically ordered solid 3He, studies of the B phase nucleation in superfluid 3He, and experimental searches for new magnetically ordered two dimensional phases of both solid and liquid 3He on graphite surfaces. The work involving glasses is intended to elucidate the nature of two level systems in amorphous materials at ultra-low temperatures, and to develop new low heat capacity/high resolution thermometers for use in the 1 to 10 mK temperature range.
Specialty: ultra-low temperature physics
Career History
- B.S., 1967, Caltech
- Ph.D., 1973, Cornell
- Member of technical staff of AT&T Bell Laboratories, 1972-87
- Head Solid State and Low Temperature Research Department 1981-87
- Professor of Physics and Applied Physics 1987-present
- J. G. Jackson and C. J. Wood Professor of Physics
HONORS/AWARDS
- Fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Simon Memorial Prize 1976
- Oliver E. Buckley Prize, 1981
- MacArthur Prize Fellow, 1981
- Walter J. Gores award for teaching, 1991
- Co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics, 1996
- Gerhard Casper University Fellow in Undergraduate Education