Willard Frank Libby Biography
- Nobel Prize Winner (1960)
Willard Frank Libby (December 17, 1908 –
September 8, 1980) was an American chemist, famous for his role in the
development of radiocarbon dating, a process which revolutionized archaeology.
Libby was born in Grand Valley, Colorado. He received his B.S. (1931) and Ph.D.
(1933) degrees in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, where
he then became a lecturer and later assistant professor. Libby spent the 1930s
building sensitive geiger counters to measure weak natural and artificial
radioactivity. In 1941 he joined Berkeley's chapter of Alpha Chi Sigma.
Awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, he spent most of 1941 at Princeton University.
After the start of World War II he worked on the Manhattan Project at Columbia
University with Nobel laureate Harold Urey. Libby was responsible for the
gaseous diffusion separation and enrichment of the Uranium-235 which was used in
the atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
In 1945 he became a professor at the University of Chicago. In 1954, he was
appointed to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. In 1959, he became Professor of
Chemistry at University of California, Los Angeles, a position he held until his
retirement in 1976. He taught honors freshman chemistry from 1959 to 1963 (in
keeping with a University tradition that senior faculty teach this class). He
was Director of the University of California statewide Institute of Geophysics
and Planetary Physics (IGPP) for many years including the lunar landing time. He
married Leona Woods Marshall, a UCLA professor of environmental engineering in
1966. He also started the first Environmental Engineering program at UCLA in
1972.
In 1960, Libby was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for leading the team (namely,
post-doc James Arnold and graduate student Ernie Anderson, with a $5,000 grant)
that developed Carbon-14 dating.
He attended Analy High School in Sebastopol, CA. The school library has a mural
depicting Libby, and a nearby highway is named in his honor.
LIST OF NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS IN
CHEMISTRY PART II.
Grignard Victor
Grubbs Robert H
Haber Fritz
Hahn Otto
Harden Sir Arthur
Hassel Odd
Hauptman Herbert
Sir Walter Norman
Haworth
Heeger Alan
Hershko Avram
Herschbach
Dudley
Herzberg Gerhard
Heyrovsky
Jaroslav
Hinshelwood Sir
Cyril Norman
Hodgkin Dorothy
Crowfoot
Hoff Jacobus Henricus
Hoffmann Roald
Huber Robert
Joliot-Curie Irene
Joliot Frederic
Karle Jerome
Karrer Paul
Kendrew Sir John
Cowdery
Klug Sir Aaron
Knowles William
Kohn Walter
Kroto Sir Harold
Kuhn Richard
Langmuir Irving
Lee Yuan
Lehn Jean-Marie
Leloir Luis
Libby Willard Frank
Lipscomb William
MacDiarmid Alan G
MacKinnon
Roderick
Marcus Rudolph A
Martin Archer John
Porter
McMillan Edwin
Mattison
Merrifield
Robert Bruce
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