Philip Burton Moon
Philip Burton Moon | |
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Doctoral advisor | Ernest Rutherford |
Other academic advisors | Sir Mark Oliphant |
Doctoral students | Noor Muhammad Butt |
Philip Burton Moon
Early life and education
Philip Burton Moon was born in 1907, attended Leyton Sixth Form College, and in 1925 entered Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. He became a research student in the Cavendish Laboratory under Ernest Rutherford. From 1928 to 1931 he worked with Mark Oliphant on the collision of atoms with solids. Rutherford called him "Oliphant's satellite" and that influence remained with him for decades.
Cavendish Laboratory
He worked at Cavendish Laboratory in the mid-1930s, where he shared a room with Australian physicist Mark Oliphant. Both later joined the University of Birmingham; Moon in 1938.
Tube Alloys and Manhattan Project
During World War II Moon was part of the MAUD Committee that confirmed the feasibility of an atomic bomb and then became part of the British delegation to the Manhattan Project, where amongst other things he did work on designing instrumentation for measuring the eventual bomb test.
His wife, Winifred Moon, was a staff worker at Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project.[2]
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Philip Moon's Los Alamos badge
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Winifred Moon's Los Alamos badge
Career at Birmingham University
After the war he was made Poynting Professor of Physics at Birmingham in 1946, succeeding Oliphant but receiving the appointment only after the first choice (
In 1950 Moon was the first person to detect gamma ray fluorescence; however his results were not considered statistically significant enough and it would be several years before they were proven.
Moon was invited to become the honorary life president of the Poynting Physical Society, at the University of Birmingham, in 1975.[3]
In 1991, Moon was the recipient of the Hughes Medal from the Royal Society.
His papers are held at the University of Birmingham Special Collections.
References
- ^ .
- ^ "Winifred F. Moon - Nuclear Museum". ahf.nuclearmuseum.org/. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- ^ Archives, The National. "The Discovery Service". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 13 November 2016.