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Richard Feynman

Richard Phillips Feynman (/ˈfnmən/; May 11, 1918 – February 15, 1988) was an American theoretical physicist, known for his work in the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, the theory of quantum electrodynamics, the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, as well as his work in particle physics for which he proposed the parton model. For his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965 jointly with Julian Schwinger and Shin'ichirō Tomonaga.

Richard Feynman
Feynman c. 1965
Born
Richard Phillips Feynman

(1918-05-11)May 11, 1918
New York City, U.S.
DiedFebruary 15, 1988(1988-02-15) (aged 69)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting placeMountain View Cemetery and Mausoleum
Education
Known for
Spouses
Arline Greenbaum
(m. 1942; died 1945)
Mary Louise Bell
(m. 1952; div. 1958)
Gweneth Howarth
(m. 1960)
Children2
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsTheoretical physics
Institutions
ThesisThe Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics (1942)
Doctoral advisorJohn Archibald Wheeler
Doctoral students
Other notable students
Signature

Feynman developed a widely used pictorial representation scheme for the mathematical expressions describing the behavior of subatomic particles, which later became known as Feynman diagrams. During his lifetime, Feynman became one of the best-known scientists in the world. In a 1999 poll of 130 leading physicists worldwide by the British journal Physics World, he was ranked the seventh-greatest physicist of all time.[1]

He assisted in the development of the atomic bomb during World War II and became known to the wider public in the 1980s as a member of the Rogers Commission, the panel that investigated the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. Along with his work in theoretical physics, Feynman has been credited with pioneering the field of quantum computing and introducing the concept of nanotechnology. He held the Richard C. Tolman professorship in theoretical physics at the California Institute of Technology.

Feynman was a keen popularizer of physics through both books and lectures, including a 1959 talk on top-down nanotechnology called There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom and the three-volume publication of his undergraduate lectures, The Feynman Lectures on Physics. Feynman also became known through his autobiographical books Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! and What Do You Care What Other People Think?, and books written about him such as Tuva or Bust! by Ralph Leighton and the biography Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman by James Gleick.

Early life edit

Feynman was born on May 11, 1918, in New York City,[2] to Lucille (née Phillips; 1895–1981), a homemaker, and Melville Arthur Feynman (1890–1946), a sales manager.[3] Feynman's father was born into a Jewish family in Minsk, Russian Empire,[4] and emigrated with his parents to the United States at the age of five. Feynman's mother was born in the United States into a Jewish family. Lucille's father had emigrated from Poland, and her mother also came from a family of Polish immigrants. She trained as a primary school teacher but married Melville in 1917, before taking up a profession.[2][3] Feynman was a late talker and did not speak until after his third birthday. As an adult, he spoke with a New York accent[5][6] strong enough to be perceived as an affectation or exaggeration,[7][8] so much so that his friends Wolfgang Pauli and Hans Bethe once commented that Feynman spoke like a "bum".[7]

The young Feynman was heavily influenced by his father, who encouraged him to ask questions to challenge orthodox thinking, and who was always ready to teach Feynman something new. From his mother, he gained the sense of humor that he had throughout his life. As a child, he had a talent for engineering,[9] maintained an experimental laboratory in his home, and delighted in repairing radios. This radio repairing was probably the first job Feynman had, and during this time he showed early signs of an aptitude for his later career in theoretical physics, when he would analyze the issues theoretically and arrive at the solutions.[10] When he was in grade school, he created a home burglar alarm system while his parents were out for the day running errands.[11]

When Richard was five, his mother gave birth to a younger brother, Henry Phillips, who died at age four weeks.[12] Four years later, Richard's sister Joan was born and the family moved to Far Rockaway, Queens.[3] Though separated by nine years, Joan and Richard were close, and they both shared a curiosity about the world.[13] Though their mother thought women lacked the capacity to understand such things, Richard encouraged Joan's interest in astronomy, and Joan eventually became an astrophysicist.[14]

Religion edit

Feynman's parents were both from Jewish families,[3] and his family went to the synagogue every Friday.[15] However, by his youth, Feynman described himself as an "avowed atheist".[16][17] Many years later, in a letter to Tina Levitan, declining a request for information for her book on Jewish Nobel Prize winners, he stated, "To select, for approbation the peculiar elements that come from some supposedly Jewish heredity is to open the door to all kinds of nonsense on racial theory", adding, "at thirteen I was not only converted to other religious views, but I also stopped believing that the Jewish people are in any way 'the chosen people'".[18]

Later in life, during a visit to the Jewish Theological Seminary, Feynman encountered the Talmud for the first time. He saw that it contained the original text in a little square on the page, and surrounding it were commentaries written over time by different people. In this way the Talmud had evolved, and everything that was discussed was carefully recorded. Despite being impressed, Feynman was disappointed with the lack of interest for nature and the outside world expressed by the rabbis, who cared about only those questions which arise from the Talmud.[19]

Education edit

Feynman attended Far Rockaway High School, which was also attended by fellow Nobel laureates Burton Richter and Baruch Samuel Blumberg.[20] Upon starting high school, Feynman was quickly promoted to a higher math class. An IQ test administered in high school estimated his IQ at 125—high but "merely respectable", according to biographer James Gleick.[21][22] His sister Joan, who scored one point higher, later jokingly claimed to an interviewer that she was smarter. Years later he declined to join Mensa International, saying that his IQ was too low.[23]

When Feynman was 15, he taught himself trigonometry, advanced algebra, infinite series, analytic geometry, and both differential and integral calculus.[24] Before entering college, he was experimenting with mathematical topics such as the half-derivative using his own notation.[25] He created special symbols for logarithm, sine, cosine and tangent functions so they did not look like three variables multiplied together, and for the derivative, to remove the temptation of canceling out the  's in  .[26][27] A member of the Arista Honor Society, in his last year in high school he won the New York University Math Championship.[28] His habit of direct characterization sometimes rattled more conventional thinkers; for example, one of his questions, when learning feline anatomy, was "Do you have a map of the cat?" (referring to an anatomical chart).[29]

Feynman applied to Columbia University but was not accepted because of their quota for the number of Jews admitted.[3] Instead, he attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he joined the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity.[30] Although he originally majored in mathematics, he later switched to electrical engineering, as he considered mathematics to be too abstract. Noticing that he "had gone too far", he then switched to physics, which he claimed was "somewhere in between".[31] As an undergraduate, he published two papers in the Physical Review.[28] One of these, which was co-written with Manuel Vallarta, was entitled "The Scattering of Cosmic Rays by the Stars of a Galaxy".[32]

Vallarta let his student in on a secret of mentor-protégé publishing: the senior scientist's name comes first. Feynman had his revenge a few years later, when Heisenberg concluded an entire book on cosmic rays with the phrase: "such an effect is not to be expected according to Vallarta and Feynman". When they next met, Feynman asked gleefully whether Vallarta had seen Heisenberg's book. Vallarta knew why Feynman was grinning. "Yes," he replied. "You're the last word in cosmic rays."[33]

The other was his senior thesis, on "Forces in Molecules",[34] based on a topic assigned by John C. Slater, who was sufficiently impressed by the paper to have it published. Its main result is known as the Hellmann–Feynman theorem.[35]

In 1939, Feynman received a bachelor's degree[36] and was named a Putnam Fellow.[37] He attained a perfect score on the graduate school entrance exams to Princeton University in physics—an unprecedented feat—and an outstanding score in mathematics, but did poorly on the history and English portions. The head of the physics department there, Henry D. Smyth, had another concern, writing to Philip M. Morse to ask: "Is Feynman Jewish? We have no definite rule against Jews but have to keep their proportion in our department reasonably small because of the difficulty of placing them."[38] Morse conceded that Feynman was indeed Jewish, but reassured Smyth that Feynman's "physiognomy and manner, however, show no trace of this characteristic".[38]

Attendees at Feynman's first seminar, which was on the classical version of the Wheeler–Feynman absorber theory, included Albert Einstein, Wolfgang Pauli, and John von Neumann. Pauli made the prescient comment that the theory would be extremely difficult to quantize, and Einstein said that one might try to apply this method to gravity in general relativity,[39] which Sir Fred Hoyle and Jayant Narlikar did much later as the Hoyle–Narlikar theory of gravity.[40][41] Feynman received a PhD from Princeton in 1942; his thesis advisor was John Archibald Wheeler.[42] In his doctoral thesis entitled "The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics",[43] Feynman applied the principle of stationary action to problems of quantum mechanics, inspired by a desire to quantize the Wheeler–Feynman absorber theory of electrodynamics, and laid the groundwork for the path integral formulation and Feynman diagrams.[44] A key insight was that positrons behaved like electrons moving backwards in time.[44] James Gleick wrote:

This was Richard Feynman nearing the crest of his powers. At twenty-three ... there may now have been no physicist on earth who could match his exuberant command over the native materials of theoretical science. It was not just a facility at mathematics (though it had become clear ... that the mathematical machinery emerging in the Wheeler–Feynman collaboration was beyond Wheeler's own ability). Feynman seemed to possess a frightening ease with the substance behind the equations, like Einstein at the same age, like the Soviet physicist Lev Landau—but few others.[42]

One of the conditions of Feynman's scholarship to Princeton was that he could not be married; nevertheless, he continued to see his high school sweetheart, Arline Greenbaum, and was determined to marry her once he had been awarded his PhD despite the knowledge that she was seriously ill with tuberculosis. This was an incurable disease at the time, and she was not expected to live more than two years. On June 29, 1942, they took the ferry to Staten Island, where they were married in the city office. The ceremony was attended by neither family nor friends and was witnessed by a pair of strangers. Feynman could kiss Arline only on the cheek. After the ceremony he took her to Deborah Hospital, where he visited her on weekends.[45][46]

Manhattan Project edit

 
Feynman's Los Alamos ID badge

In 1941, with World War II raging in Europe but the United States not yet at war, Feynman spent the summer working on ballistics problems at the Frankford Arsenal in Pennsylvania.[47][48] After the attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into the war, Feynman was recruited by Robert R. Wilson, who was working on means to produce enriched uranium for use in an atomic bomb, as part of what would become the Manhattan Project.[49][50] At the time, Feynman had not earned a graduate degree.[51] Wilson's team at Princeton was working on a device called an isotron, intended to electromagnetically separate uranium-235 from uranium-238. This was done in a quite different manner from that used by the calutron that was under development by a team under Wilson's former mentor, Ernest O. Lawrence, at the Radiation Laboratory of the University of California. On paper, the isotron was many times more efficient than the calutron, but Feynman and Paul Olum struggled to determine whether it was practical. Ultimately, on Lawrence's recommendation, the isotron project was abandoned.[52]

At this juncture, in early 1943, Robert Oppenheimer was establishing the Los Alamos Laboratory, a secret laboratory on a mesa in New Mexico where atomic bombs would be designed and built. An offer was made to the Princeton team to be redeployed there. "Like a bunch of professional soldiers," Wilson later recalled, "we signed up, en masse, to go to Los Alamos."[53] Like many other young physicists, Feynman soon fell under the spell of the charismatic Oppenheimer, who telephoned Feynman long distance from Chicago to inform him that he had found a Presbyterian sanatorium in Albuquerque, New Mexico for Arline. They were among the first to depart for New Mexico, leaving on a train on March 28, 1943. The railroad supplied Arline with a wheelchair, and Feynman paid extra for a private room for her. There they spent their wedding anniversary.[54]

At Los Alamos, Feynman was assigned to Hans Bethe's Theoretical (T) Division,[55] and impressed Bethe enough to be made a group leader.[56] He and Bethe developed the Bethe–Feynman formula for calculating the yield of a fission bomb, which built upon previous work by Robert Serber.[57] As a junior physicist, he was not central to the project. He administered the computation group of human computers in the theoretical division. With Stanley Frankel and Nicholas Metropolis, he assisted in establishing a system for using IBM punched cards for computation.[58] He invented a new method of computing logarithms that he later used on the Connection Machine.[59][60] An avid drummer, Feynman figured out how to get the machine to click in musical rhythms.[61]

Other work at Los Alamos included calculating neutron equations for the Los Alamos "Water Boiler", a small nuclear reactor, to measure how close an assembly of fissile material was to criticality.[62]

On completing this work, Feynman was sent to the Clinton Engineer Works in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where the Manhattan Project had its uranium enrichment facilities. He aided the engineers there in devising safety procedures for material storage so that criticality accidents could be avoided, especially when enriched uranium came into contact with water, which acted as a neutron moderator. He insisted on giving the rank and file a lecture on nuclear physics so that they would realize the dangers.[63] He explained that while any amount of unenriched uranium could be safely stored, the enriched uranium had to be carefully handled. He developed a series of safety recommendations for the various grades of enrichments.[64] He was told that if the people at Oak Ridge gave him any difficulty with his proposals, he was to inform them that Los Alamos "could not be responsible for their safety otherwise".[65]

 
At the 1946 colloquium on the "Super" at the Los Alamos Laboratory. Feynman is in the second row, fourth from left, next to Oppenheimer.

Returning to Los Alamos, Feynman was put in charge of the group responsible for the theoretical work and calculations on the proposed uranium hydride bomb, which ultimately proved to be infeasible.[56][66] He was sought out by physicist Niels Bohr for one-on-one discussions. He later discovered the reason: most of the other physicists were too much in awe of Bohr to argue with him. Feynman had no such inhibitions, vigorously pointing out anything he considered to be flawed in Bohr's thinking. He said he felt as much respect for Bohr as anyone else, but once anyone got him talking about physics, he would become so focused he forgot about social niceties. Perhaps because of this, Bohr never warmed to Feynman.[67][68]

At Los Alamos, which was isolated for security, Feynman amused himself by investigating the combination locks on the cabinets and desks of physicists. He often found that they left the lock combinations on the factory settings, wrote the combinations down, or used easily guessable combinations like dates.[69] He found one cabinet's combination by trying numbers he thought a physicist might use (it proved to be 27–18–28 after the base of natural logarithms, e = 2.71828 ...), and found that the three filing cabinets where a colleague kept research notes all had the same combination. He left notes in the cabinets as a prank, spooking his colleague, Frederic de Hoffmann, into thinking a spy had gained access to them.[70]

Feynman's $380 (equivalent to $6,000 in 2022) monthly salary was about half the amount needed for his modest living expenses and Arline's medical bills, and they were forced to dip into her $3,300 (equivalent to $56,000 in 2022) in savings.[71] On weekends he borrowed a car from his friend Klaus Fuchs to drive to Albuquerque to see Arline.[72][73] Asked who at Los Alamos was most likely to be a spy, Fuchs mentioned Feynman's safe-cracking and frequent trips to Albuquerque;[72] Fuchs himself later confessed to spying for the Soviet Union.[74] The FBI would compile a bulky file on Feynman,[75] particularly in view of Feynman's Q clearance.[76]

 
Feynman (center) with Robert Oppenheimer (immediately right of Feynman) at a Los Alamos Laboratory social function during the Manhattan Project.

Informed that Arline was dying, Feynman drove to Albuquerque and sat with her for hours until she died on June 16, 1945.[77] He then immersed himself in work on the project and was present at the Trinity nuclear test. Feynman claimed to be the only person to see the explosion without the very dark glasses or welder's lenses provided, reasoning that it was safe to look through a truck windshield, as it would screen out the harmful ultraviolet radiation. The immense brightness of the explosion made him duck to the truck's floor, where he saw a temporary "purple splotch" afterimage.[78]

Cornell edit

Feynman nominally held an appointment at the University of Wisconsin–Madison as an assistant professor of physics, but was on unpaid leave during his involvement in the Manhattan Project.[79] In 1945, he received a letter from Dean Mark Ingraham of the College of Letters and Science requesting his return to the university to teach in the coming academic year. His appointment was not extended when he did not commit to returning. In a talk given there several years later, Feynman quipped, "It's great to be back at the only university that ever had the good sense to fire me."[80]

As early as October 30, 1943, Bethe had written to the chairman of the physics department of his university, Cornell, to recommend that Feynman be hired. On February 28, 1944, this was endorsed by Robert Bacher,[81] also from Cornell,[82] and one of the most senior scientists at Los Alamos.[83] This led to an offer being made in August 1944, which Feynman accepted. Oppenheimer had also hoped to recruit Feynman to the University of California, but the head of the physics department, Raymond T. Birge, was reluctant. He made Feynman an offer in May 1945, but Feynman turned it down. Cornell matched its salary offer of $3,900 (equivalent to $63,000 in 2022) per annum.[81] Feynman became one of the first of the Los Alamos Laboratory's group leaders to depart, leaving for Ithaca, New York, in October 1945.[84]

Because Feynman was no longer working at the Los Alamos Laboratory, he was no longer exempt from the draft. At his induction physical, Army psychiatrists diagnosed Feynman as suffering from a mental illness and the Army gave him a 4-F exemption on mental grounds.[85][86] His father died suddenly on October 8, 1946, and Feynman suffered from depression.[87] On October 17, 1946, he wrote a letter to Arline, expressing his deep love and heartbreak. The letter was sealed and only opened after his death. "Please excuse my not mailing this," the letter concluded, "but I don't know your new address."[88] Unable to focus on research problems, Feynman began tackling physics problems, not for utility, but for self-satisfaction.[87] One of these involved analyzing the physics of a twirling, nutating disk as it is moving through the air, inspired by an incident in the cafeteria at Cornell when someone tossed a dinner plate in the air.[89] He read the work of Sir William Rowan Hamilton on quaternions, and tried unsuccessfully to use them to formulate a relativistic theory of electrons. His work during this period, which used equations of rotation to express various spinning speeds, ultimately proved important to his Nobel Prize–winning work, yet because he felt burned out and had turned his attention to less immediately practical problems, he was surprised by the offers of professorships from other renowned universities, including the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of California, Berkeley.[87]

 
Feynman diagram of electron/positron annihilation

Feynman was not the only frustrated theoretical physicist in the early post-war years. Quantum electrodynamics suffered from infinite integrals in perturbation theory. These were clear mathematical flaws in the theory, which Feynman and Wheeler had tried, unsuccessfully, to work around.[90] "Theoreticians", noted Murray Gell-Mann, "were in disgrace".[91] In June 1947, leading American physicists met at the Shelter Island Conference. For Feynman, it was his "first big conference with big men ... I had never gone to one like this one in peacetime."[92] The problems plaguing quantum electrodynamics were discussed, but the theoreticians were completely overshadowed by the achievements of the experimentalists, who reported the discovery of the Lamb shift, the measurement of the magnetic moment of the electron, and Robert Marshak's two-meson hypothesis.[93]

Bethe took the lead from the work of Hans Kramers, and derived a renormalized non-relativistic quantum equation for the Lamb shift. The next step was to create a relativistic version. Feynman thought that he could do this, but when he went back to Bethe with his solution, it did not converge.[94] Feynman carefully worked through the problem again, applying the path integral formulation that he had used in his thesis. Like Bethe, he made the integral finite by applying a cut-off term. The result corresponded to Bethe's version.[95][96] Feynman presented his work to his peers at the Pocono Conference in 1948. It did not go well. Julian Schwinger gave a long presentation of his work in quantum electrodynamics, and Feynman then offered his version, entitled "Alternative Formulation of Quantum Electrodynamics". The unfamiliar Feynman diagrams, used for the first time, puzzled the audience. Feynman failed to get his point across, and Paul Dirac, Edward Teller and Niels Bohr all raised objections.[97][98]

To Freeman Dyson, one thing at least was clear: Shin'ichirō Tomonaga, Schwinger and Feynman understood what they were talking about even if no one else did, but had not published anything. He was convinced that Feynman's formulation was easier to understand, and ultimately managed to convince Oppenheimer that this was the case.[99] Dyson published a paper in 1949, which added new rules to Feynman's that told how to implement renormalization.[100] Feynman was prompted to publish his ideas in the Physical Review in a series of papers over three years.[101] His 1948 papers on "A Relativistic Cut-Off for Classical Electrodynamics" attempted to explain what he had been unable to get across at Pocono.[102] His 1949 paper on "The Theory of Positrons" addressed the Schrödinger equation and Dirac equation, and introduced what is now called the Feynman propagator.[103] Finally, in papers on the "Mathematical Formulation of the Quantum Theory of Electromagnetic Interaction" in 1950 and "An Operator Calculus Having Applications in Quantum Electrodynamics" in 1951, he developed the mathematical basis of his ideas, derived familiar formulae and advanced new ones.[104]

While papers by others initially cited Schwinger, papers citing Feynman and employing Feynman diagrams appeared in 1950, and soon became prevalent.[105] Students learned and used the powerful new tool that Feynman had created. Computer programs were later written to evaluate Feynman diagrams, enabling physicists to use quantum field theory to make high-precision predictions.[106] Marc Kac adapted Feynman's technique of summing over possible histories of a particle to the study of parabolic partial differential equations, yielding what is now known as the Feynman–Kac formula, the use of which extends beyond physics to many applications of stochastic processes.[107] To Schwinger, however, the Feynman diagram was "pedagogy, not physics".[108]

By 1949, Feynman was becoming restless at Cornell. He never settled into a particular house or apartment, living in guest houses or student residences, or with married friends "until these arrangements became sexually volatile".[109] He liked to date undergraduates, hire prostitutes, and sleep with the wives of friends.[110] He was not fond of Ithaca's cold winter weather, and pined for a warmer climate.[111] Above all, he was always in the shadow of Hans Bethe at Cornell.[109] Despite all of this, Feynman looked back favorably on the Telluride House, where he resided for a large period of his Cornell career. In an interview, he described the House as "a group of boys that have been specially selected because of their scholarship, because of their cleverness or whatever it is, to be given free board and lodging and so on, because of their brains". He enjoyed the house's convenience and said that "it's there that I did the fundamental work" for which he won the Nobel Prize.[112][113]

Caltech years edit

Personal and political life edit

Feynman spent several weeks in Rio de Janeiro in July 1949.[114] That year, the Soviet Union detonated its first atomic bomb, generating concerns about espionage.[115] Fuchs was arrested as a Soviet spy in 1950 and the FBI questioned Bethe about Feynman's loyalty.[116] Physicist David Bohm was arrested on December 4, 1950[117] and emigrated to Brazil in October 1951.[118] Because of the fears of a nuclear war, a girlfriend told Feynman that he should also consider moving to South America.[115] He had a sabbatical coming for 1951–1952,[119] and elected to spend it in Brazil, where he gave courses at the Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Físicas.

 
Feynman with drums

In Brazil, Feynman was impressed with samba music, and learned to play the frigideira,[120] a metal percussion instrument based on a frying pan.[121] He was an enthusiastic amateur player of bongo and conga drums and often played them in the pit orchestra in musicals.[122][123] He spent time in Rio with his friend Bohm, but Bohm could not convince Feynman to investigate Bohm's ideas on physics.[124]

Feynman did not return to Cornell. Bacher, who had been instrumental in bringing Feynman to Cornell, had lured him to the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). Part of the deal was that he could spend his first year on sabbatical in Brazil.[125][109] He had become smitten by Mary Louise Bell from Neodesha, Kansas. They had met in a cafeteria in Cornell, where she had studied the history of Mexican art and textiles. She later followed him to Caltech, where he gave a lecture. While he was in Brazil, she taught classes on the history of furniture and interiors at Michigan State University. He proposed to her by mail from Rio de Janeiro, and they married in Boise, Idaho, on June 28, 1952, shortly after he returned. They frequently quarreled and she was frightened by his violent temper. Their politics were different; although he registered and voted as a Republican, she was more conservative, and her opinion on the 1954 Oppenheimer security hearing ("Where there's smoke there's fire") offended him. They separated on May 20, 1956. An interlocutory decree of divorce was entered on June 19, 1956, on the grounds of "extreme cruelty". The divorce became final on May 5, 1958.[126][127]

He begins working calculus problems in his head as soon as he awakens. He did calculus while driving in his car, while sitting in the living room, and while lying in bed at night. Mary Louise Bell, divorce complaint[128]

In the wake of the 1957 Sputnik crisis, the U.S. government's interest in science rose for a time. Feynman was considered for a seat on the President's Science Advisory Committee, but was not appointed. At this time, the FBI interviewed a woman close to Feynman, possibly his ex-wife Bell, who sent a written statement to J. Edgar Hoover on August 8, 1958:

I do not know—but I believe that Richard Feynman is either a Communist or very strongly pro-Communist—and as such is a very definite security risk. This man is, in my opinion, an extremely complex and dangerous person, a very dangerous person to have in a position of public trust ... In matters of intrigue Richard Feynman is, I believe immensely clever—indeed a genius—and he is, I further believe, completely ruthless, unhampered by morals, ethics, or religion—and will stop at absolutely nothing to achieve his ends.[127]

The U.S. government nevertheless sent Feynman to Geneva for the September 1958 Atoms for Peace Conference. On the beach at Lake Geneva, he met Gweneth Howarth, who was from Ripponden, Yorkshire, and working in Switzerland as an au pair. Feynman's love life had been turbulent since his divorce; his previous girlfriend had walked off with his Albert Einstein Award medal and, on the advice of an earlier girlfriend, had feigned pregnancy and extorted him into paying for an abortion, then used the money to buy furniture. When Feynman found that Howarth was being paid only $25 a month, he offered her $20 (equivalent to $202 in 2022) a week to be his live-in maid. Feynman knew that this sort of behavior was illegal under the Mann Act, so he had a friend, Matthew Sands, act as her sponsor. Howarth pointed out that she already had two boyfriends, but decided to take Feynman up on his offer, and arrived in Altadena, California, in June 1959. She made a point of dating other men, but Feynman proposed in early 1960. They were married on September 24, 1960, at the Huntington Hotel in Pasadena. They had a son, Carl, in 1962, and adopted a daughter, Michelle, in 1968.[129][130] Besides their home in Altadena, they had a beach house in Baja California, purchased with the money from Feynman's Nobel Prize.[131]

Feynman tried marijuana and ketamine at John Lilly's sensory deprivation tanks, as a way of studying consciousness.[132][133] He gave up alcohol when he began to show vague, early signs of alcoholism, as he did not want to do anything that could damage his brain. Despite his curiosity about hallucinations, he was reluctant to experiment with LSD.[134]

Feynman had synesthesia, and said that mathematical symbols had different colors for him: "When I see equations, I see the letters in colors. I don't know why. I see vague pictures of Bessel functions with light-tan j's, slightly violet-bluish n's, and dark brown x's flying around."[135]

There had been protests over his alleged sexism in 1968, and again in 1972. Although there is no evidence he supported discrimination against women in science, protestors "objected to his use of sexist stories about 'lady drivers' and clueless women in his lectures."[136][137] Feynman recalled protesters entering a hall and picketing a lecture he was about to make in San Francisco, calling him a "sexist pig". Seeing the protesters, as Feynman later recalled the incident, he addressed institutional sexism by saying that "women do indeed suffer prejudice and discrimination in physics, and your presence here today serves to remind us of these difficulties and the need to remedy them".[138]

Physics edit

At Caltech, Feynman investigated the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, where helium seems to display a complete lack of viscosity when flowing. Feynman provided a quantum-mechanical explanation for the Soviet physicist Lev Landau's theory of superfluidity.[139] Applying the Schrödinger equation to the question showed that the superfluid was displaying quantum mechanical behavior observable on a macroscopic scale. This helped with the problem of superconductivity, but the solution eluded Feynman.[140] It was solved with the BCS theory of superconductivity, proposed by John Bardeen, Leon Neil Cooper, and John Robert Schrieffer in 1957.[139]

 
Feynman at the Robert Treat Paine Estate in Waltham, Massachusetts, in 1984

Feynman, inspired by a desire to quantize the Wheeler–Feynman absorber theory of electrodynamics, laid the groundwork for the path integral formulation and Feynman diagrams.[44]

With Murray Gell-Mann, Feynman developed a model of weak decay, which showed that the current coupling in the process is a combination of vector and axial currents (an example of weak decay is the decay of a neutron into an electron, a proton, and an antineutrino). Although E. C. George Sudarshan and Robert Marshak developed the theory nearly simultaneously, Feynman's collaboration with Gell-Mann was seen as seminal because the weak interaction was neatly described by the vector and axial currents. It thus combined the 1933 beta decay theory of Enrico Fermi with an explanation of parity violation.[141]

Feynman attempted an explanation, called the parton model, of the strong interactions governing nucleon scattering. The parton model emerged as a complement to the quark model developed by Gell-Mann. The relationship between the two models was murky; Gell-Mann referred to Feynman's partons derisively as "put-ons". In the mid-1960s, physicists believed that quarks were just a bookkeeping device for symmetry numbers, not real particles; the statistics of the omega-minus particle, if it were interpreted as three identical strange quarks bound together, seemed impossible if quarks were real.[142][143]

The SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory deep inelastic scattering experiments of the late 1960s showed that nucleons (protons and neutrons) contained point-like particles that scattered electrons. It was natural to identify these with quarks, but Feynman's parton model attempted to interpret the experimental data in a way that did not introduce additional hypotheses. For example, the data showed that some 45% of the energy momentum was carried by electrically neutral particles in the nucleon. These electrically neutral particles are now seen to be the gluons that carry the forces between the quarks, and their three-valued color quantum number solves the omega-minus problem. Feynman did not dispute the quark model; for example, when the fifth quark was discovered in 1977, Feynman immediately pointed out to his students that the discovery implied the existence of a sixth quark, which was discovered in the decade after his death.[142][144]

After the success of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman turned to quantum gravity. By analogy with the photon, which has spin 1, he investigated the consequences of a free massless spin 2 field and derived the Einstein field equation of general relativity, but little more. The computational device that Feynman discovered then for gravity, "ghosts", which are "particles" in the interior of his diagrams that have the "wrong" connection between spin and statistics, have proved invaluable in explaining the quantum particle behavior of the Yang–Mills theories, for example, quantum chromodynamics and the electro-weak theory.[145] He did work on all four of the fundamental interactions of nature: electromagnetic, the weak force, the strong force and gravity. John and Mary Gribbin state in their book on Feynman that "Nobody else has made such influential contributions to the investigation of all four of the interactions".[146]

Partly as a way to bring publicity to progress in physics, Feynman offered $1,000 prizes for two of his challenges in nanotechnology; one was claimed by William McLellan and the other by Tom Newman.[147]

Feynman was also interested in the relationship between physics and computation. He was also one of the first scientists to conceive the possibility of quantum computers.[148][149][150] In the 1980s he began to spend his summers working at Thinking Machines Corporation, helping to build some of the first parallel supercomputers and considering the construction of quantum computers.[151][152]

In 1984–1986, he developed a variational method for the approximate calculation of path integrals, which has led to a powerful method of converting divergent perturbation expansions into convergent strong-coupling expansions (variational perturbation theory) and, as a consequence, to the most accurate determination[153] of critical exponents measured in satellite experiments.[154] At Caltech, he once chalked "What I cannot create I do not understand" on his blackboard.[155]

Machine technology edit

Feynman had studied the ideas of John von Neumann while researching quantum field theory. His most famous lecture on the subject was delivered in 1959 at the California Institute of Technology, published under the title There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom a year later. In this lecture he theorized on future opportunities for designing miniaturized machines, which could build smaller reproductions of themselves. This lecture is frequently cited in technical literature on microtechnology, and nanotechnology.[156]

Pedagogy edit

 
Feynman during a lecture

In the early 1960s, Feynman acceded to a request to "spruce up" the teaching of undergraduates at the California Institute of Technology, also called Caltech. After three years devoted to the task, he produced a series of lectures that later became The Feynman Lectures on Physics. Accounts vary about how successful the original lectures were. Feynman's own preface, written just after an exam on which the students did poorly, was somewhat pessimistic. His colleagues David L. Goodstein and Gerry Neugebauer said later that the intended audience of first-year students found the material intimidating while older students and faculty found it inspirational, so the lecture hall remained full even as the first-year students dropped away. In contrast, physicist Matthew Sands recalled the student attendance as being typical for a large lecture course.[157]

Converting the lectures into books occupied Matthew Sands and Robert B. Leighton as part-time co-authors for several years. Feynman suggested that the book cover should have a picture of a drum with mathematical diagrams about vibrations drawn upon it, in order to illustrate the application of mathematics to understanding the world. Instead, the publishers gave the books plain red covers, though they included a picture of Feynman playing drums in the foreword.[158] Even though the books were not adopted by universities as textbooks, they continue to sell well because they provide a deep understanding of physics.[159]

Many of Feynman's lectures and miscellaneous talks were turned into other books, including The Character of Physical Law, QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, Statistical Mechanics, Lectures on Gravitation, and the Feynman Lectures on Computation.[160]

Feynman wrote about his experiences teaching physics undergraduates in Brazil. The students' studying habits and the Portuguese language textbooks were so devoid of any context or applications for their information that, in Feynman's opinion, the students were not learning physics at all. At the end of the year, Feynman was invited to give a lecture on his teaching experiences, and he agreed to do so, provided he could speak frankly, which he did.[161][162]

Feynman opposed rote learning, or unthinking memorization, as well as other teaching methods that emphasized form over function. In his mind, clear thinking and clear presentation were fundamental prerequisites for his attention. It could be perilous even to approach him unprepared, and he did not forget fools and pretenders.[163]

In 1964, he served on the California State Curriculum Commission, which was responsible for approving textbooks to be used by schools in California. He was not impressed with what he found.[164] Many of the mathematics texts covered subjects of use only to pure mathematicians as part of the "New Math". Elementary students were taught about sets, but:

It will perhaps surprise most people who have studied these textbooks to discover that the symbol ∪ or ∩ representing union and intersection of sets and the special use of the brackets { } and so forth, all the elaborate notation for sets that is given in these books, almost never appear in any writings in theoretical physics, in engineering, in business arithmetic, computer design, or other places where mathematics is being used. I see no need or reason for this all to be explained or to be taught in school. It is not a useful way to express one's self. It is not a cogent and simple way. It is claimed to be precise, but precise for what purpose?[165]

In April 1966, Feynman delivered an address to the National Science Teachers Association, in which he suggested how students could be made to think like scientists, be open-minded, curious, and especially, to doubt. In the course of the lecture, he gave a definition of science, which he said came about by several stages. The evolution of intelligent life on planet Earth—creatures such as cats that play and learn from experience. The evolution of humans, who came to use language to pass knowledge from one individual to the next, so that the knowledge was not lost when an individual died. Unfortunately, incorrect knowledge could be passed down as well as correct knowledge, so another step was needed. Galileo and others started doubting the truth of what was passed down and to investigate ab initio, from experience, what the true situation was—this was science.[166]

In 1974, Feynman delivered the Caltech commencement address on the topic of cargo cult science, which has the semblance of science, but is only pseudoscience due to a lack of "a kind of scientific integrity, a principle of scientific thought that corresponds to a kind of utter honesty" on the part of the scientist. He instructed the graduating class that "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself—and you are the easiest person to fool. So you have to be very careful about that. After you've not fooled yourself, it's easy not to fool other scientists. You just have to be honest in a conventional way after that."[167]

Feynman served as doctoral advisor to 30 students.[168]

Case before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission edit

In 1977, Feynman supported his colleague Jenijoy La Belle, who had been hired as Caltech's first female professor in 1969, and filed suit with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission after she was refused tenure in 1974. The EEOC ruled against Caltech in 1977, adding that La Belle had been paid less than male colleagues. La Belle finally received tenure in 1979. Many of Feynman's colleagues were surprised that he took her side, but he had gotten to know La Belle and liked and admired her.[136][169]

Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! edit

In the 1960s, Feynman began thinking of writing an autobiography, and he began granting interviews to historians. In the 1980s, working with Ralph Leighton (Robert Leighton's son), he recorded chapters on audio tape that Ralph transcribed. The book was published in 1985 as Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! and became a best-seller.[170]

Gell-Mann was upset by Feynman's account in the book of the weak interaction work, and threatened to sue, resulting in a correction being inserted in later editions.[171] This incident was just the latest provocation in decades of bad feeling between the two scientists. Gell-Mann often expressed frustration at the attention Feynman received;[172] he remarked: "[Feynman] was a great scientist, but he spent a great deal of his effort generating anecdotes about himself."[173]

Feynman has been criticized for a chapter in the book entitled "You Just Ask Them?", where he describes how he learned to seduce women at a bar he went to in the summer of 1946. A mentor taught him to ask a woman if she would sleep with him before buying her anything. He describes seeing women at the bar as "bitches" in his thoughts, and tells a story of how he told a woman named Ann that she was "worse than a whore" after Ann persuaded him to buy her sandwiches by telling him he could eat them at her place, but then, after he bought them, saying they actually could not eat together because another man was coming over. Later on that same evening, Ann returned to the bar to take Feynman to her place.[174][175][176] Feynman states at the end of the chapter that this behaviour was not typical of him: "So it worked even with an ordinary girl! But no matter how effective the lesson was, I never really used it after that. I didn't enjoy doing it that way. But it was interesting to know that things worked much differently from how I was brought up."[113]

Challenger disaster edit

 
The 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster

Feynman played an important role on the Presidential Rogers Commission, which investigated the 1986 Challenger disaster. He had been reluctant to participate, but was persuaded by advice from his wife.[177] Feynman clashed several times with commission chairman William P. Rogers. During a break in one hearing, Rogers told commission member Neil Armstrong, "Feynman is becoming a pain in the ass."[178]

During a televised hearing, Feynman demonstrated that the material used in the shuttle's O-rings became less resilient in cold weather by compressing a sample of the material in a clamp and immersing it in ice-cold water.[179] The commission ultimately determined that the disaster was caused by the primary O-ring not properly sealing in unusually cold weather at Cape Canaveral.[180]

Feynman devoted the latter half of his 1988 book What Do You Care What Other People Think? to his experience on the Rogers Commission, straying from his usual convention of brief, light-hearted anecdotes to deliver an extended and sober narrative. Feynman's account reveals a disconnect between NASA's engineers and executives that was far more striking than he expected. His interviews of NASA's high-ranking managers revealed startling misunderstandings of elementary concepts. For instance, NASA managers claimed that there was a 1 in 100,000 probability of a catastrophic failure aboard the Shuttle, but Feynman discovered that NASA's own engineers estimated the probability of a catastrophe at closer to 1 in 200. He concluded that NASA management's estimate of the reliability of the Space Shuttle was unrealistic, and he was particularly angered that NASA used it to recruit Christa McAuliffe into the Teacher-in-Space program. He warned in his appendix to the commission's report (which was included only after he threatened not to sign the report), "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."[181]

Recognition and awards edit

The first public recognition of Feynman's work came in 1954, when Lewis Strauss, the chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) notified him that he had won the Albert Einstein Award, which was worth $15,000 and came with a gold medal. Because of Strauss's actions in stripping Oppenheimer of his security clearance, Feynman was reluctant to accept the award, but Isidor Isaac Rabi cautioned him: "You should never turn a man's generosity as a sword against him. Any virtue that a man has, even if he has many vices, should not be used as a tool against him."[182] It was followed by the AEC's Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award in 1962.[183] Schwinger, Tomonaga and Feynman shared the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics "for their fundamental work in quantum electrodynamics, with deep-ploughing consequences for the physics of elementary particles".[184] He was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 1965,[2][185] received the Oersted Medal in 1972,[186] and the National Medal of Science in 1979.[187] He was elected a Member of the National Academy of Sciences, but ultimately resigned[188][189] and is no longer listed by them.[190]

Death edit

In 1978, Feynman sought medical treatment for abdominal pains and was diagnosed with liposarcoma, a rare form of cancer. Surgeons removed a "very large" tumor that had crushed one kidney and his spleen. In 1986 doctors discovered another cancer, Waldenström macroglobulinemia.[191] Further operations were performed in October 1986 and October 1987.[192] He was again hospitalized at the UCLA Medical Center on February 3, 1988. A ruptured duodenal ulcer caused kidney failure, and he declined to undergo the dialysis that might have prolonged his life for a few months. Feynman's wife Gweneth, sister Joan, and cousin Frances Lewine watched over him during the final days of his life until he died on February 15, 1988.[193]

When Feynman was nearing death, he asked his friend and colleague Danny Hillis why Hillis appeared so sad. Hillis replied that he thought Feynman was going to die soon. Hillis quotes Feynman as replying:

"Yeah," he sighed, "that bugs me sometimes too. But not so much as you think . . . when you get as old as I am, you start to realize that you've told most of the good stuff you know to other people anyway."[194]

Near the end of his life, Feynman attempted to visit the Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (ASSR) in the Soviet Union, a dream thwarted by Cold War bureaucratic issues. The letter from the Soviet government authorizing the trip was not received until the day after he died. His daughter Michelle later made the journey.[195] Ralph Leighton chronicled the attempt in Tuva or Bust!, published in 1991.

His burial was at Mountain View Cemetery and Mausoleum in Altadena, California.[196] His last words were: "I'd hate to die twice. It's so boring."[195]

Popular legacy edit

 
Bust of Feynman on NTHU campus, Taiwan

Aspects of Feynman's life have been portrayed in various media. Feynman was portrayed by Matthew Broderick in the 1996 biopic Infinity.[197] Actor Alan Alda commissioned playwright Peter Parnell to write a two-character play about a fictional day in the life of Feynman set two years before Feynman's death. The play, QED, premiered at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles in 2001 and was later presented at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on Broadway, with both presentations starring Alda as Richard Feynman.[198] Real Time Opera premiered its opera Feynman at the Norfolk (Connecticut) Chamber Music Festival in June 2005.[199] In 2011, Feynman was the subject of a biographical graphic novel entitled simply Feynman, written by Jim Ottaviani and illustrated by Leland Myrick.[200] In 2013, Feynman's role on the Rogers Commission was dramatised by the BBC in The Challenger (US title: The Challenger Disaster), with William Hurt playing Feynman.[201][202][203] In 2016, Oscar Isaac performed a public reading of Feynman's 1946 love letter to the late Arline.[204] In the 2023 American film Oppenheimer, directed by Christopher Nolan and based on American Prometheus, Feynman is portrayed by actor Jack Quaid.[205]

Feynman is commemorated in various ways. On May 4, 2005, the United States Postal Service issued the "American Scientists" commemorative set of four 37-cent self-adhesive stamps in several configurations. The scientists depicted were Richard Feynman, John von Neumann, Barbara McClintock, and Josiah Willard Gibbs. Feynman's stamp, sepia-toned, features a photograph of Feynman in his thirties and eight small Feynman diagrams.[206] The stamps were designed by Victor Stabin under the artistic direction of Carl T. Herrman.[207][208][209][210][211] The main building for the Computing Division at Fermilab is named the "Feynman Computing Center" in his honor.[212] Two photographs of Feynman were used in Apple Computer's "Think Different" advertising campaign, which launched in 1997.[213][214] Sheldon Cooper, a fictional theoretical physicist from the television series The Big Bang Theory, is a Feynman fan who has emulated him on various occasions, once by playing the bongo drums.[215] On January 27, 2016, co-founder of Microsoft Bill Gates wrote an article describing Feynman's talents as a teacher ("The Best Teacher I Never Had"), which inspired Gates to create Project Tuva to place the videos of Feynman's Messenger Lectures, The Character of Physical Law, on a website for public viewing. In 2015 Gates made a video in response to Caltech's request for thoughts on Feynman for the 50th anniversary of Feynman's 1965 Nobel Prize, on why he thought Feynman was special.[216] At CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research, home of the Large Hadron Collider), a street on the Meyrin site is named "Route Feynman".

Bibliography edit

Selected scientific works edit

  • Feynman, Richard P. (1942). Laurie M. Brown (ed.). The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics. PhD Dissertation, Princeton University. World Scientific (with title "Feynman's Thesis: a New Approach to Quantum Theory") (published 2005). ISBN 978-981-256-380-4.
  • Wheeler, John A.; Feynman, Richard P. (1945). . Reviews of Modern Physics. 17 (2–3): 157–181. Bibcode:1945RvMP...17..157W. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.17.157. Archived from the original on April 17, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1946). A Theorem and its Application to Finite Tampers. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Atomic Energy Commission. doi:10.2172/4341197. OSTI 4341197.
  • Feynman, Richard P.; Welton, T. A. (1946). Neutron Diffusion in a Space Lattice of Fissionable and Absorbing Materials. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Atomic Energy Commission. doi:10.2172/4381097. OSTI 4381097.
  • Feynman, Richard P.; Metropolis, N.; Teller, E. (1947). Equations of State of Elements Based on the Generalized Fermi-Thomas Theory (PDF). Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Atomic Energy Commission. doi:10.2172/4417654. OSTI 4417654.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1948). . Reviews of Modern Physics. 20 (2): 367–387. Bibcode:1948RvMP...20..367F. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.20.367. Archived from the original on September 17, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1948). . Physical Review. 74 (8): 939–946. Bibcode:1948PhRv...74..939F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.74.939. Archived from the original on September 19, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1948). . Physical Review. 74 (10): 1430–1438. Bibcode:1948PhRv...74.1430F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.74.1430. Archived from the original on September 19, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Wheeler, John A.; Feynman, Richard P. (1949). "Classical Electrodynamics in Terms of Direct Interparticle Action" (PDF). Reviews of Modern Physics. 21 (3): 425–433. Bibcode:1949RvMP...21..425W. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.21.425.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1949). . Physical Review. 76 (6): 749–759. Bibcode:1949PhRv...76..749F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.76.749. S2CID 120117564. Archived from the original on August 9, 2022. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1949). "Space-Time Approach to Quantum Electrodynamic". Physical Review. 76 (6): 769–789. Bibcode:1949PhRv...76..769F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.76.769.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1950). . Physical Review. 80 (3): 440–457. Bibcode:1950PhRv...80..440F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.80.440. Archived from the original on September 14, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1951). . Physical Review. 84 (1): 108–128. Bibcode:1951PhRv...84..108F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.84.108. Archived from the original on September 15, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1953). . Physical Review. 90 (6): 1116–1117. Bibcode:1953PhRv...90.1116F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.90.1116.2. Archived from the original on September 17, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P.; de Hoffmann, F.; Serber, R. (1955). Dispersion of the Neutron Emission in U235 Fission. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Atomic Energy Commission. doi:10.2172/4354998. OSTI 4354998.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1956). "Science and the Open Channel". Science (published February 24, 1956). 123 (3191): 307. Bibcode:1956Sci...123..307F. doi:10.1126/science.123.3191.307. PMID 17774518.
  • Cohen, M.; Feynman, Richard P. (1957). . Physical Review. 107 (1): 13–24. Bibcode:1957PhRv..107...13C. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.107.13. Archived from the original on September 14, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  • Feynman, Richard P.; Vernon, F. L.; Hellwarth, R. W. (1957). "Geometric representation of the Schrödinger equation for solving maser equations" (PDF). Journal of Applied Physics. 28 (1): 49. Bibcode:1957JAP....28...49F. doi:10.1063/1.1722572.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1960). "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom". Engineering and Science. 23 (5): 22–36.
  • Edgar, R. S.; Feynman, Richard P.; Klein, S.; Lielausis, I.; Steinberg, C. M. (1962). "Mapping experiments with r mutants of bacteriophage T4D". Genetics (published February 1962). 47 (2): 179–86. doi:10.1093/genetics/47.2.179. PMC 1210321. PMID 13889186.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1968) [1966]. "What is Science?" (PDF). The Physics Teacher. 7 (6): 313–320. Bibcode:1969PhTea...7..313F. doi:10.1119/1.2351388. Retrieved June 10, 2023. Lecture presented at the fifteenth annual meeting of the National Science Teachers Association, 1966 in New York City.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1966). "The Development of the Space-Time View of Quantum Electrodynamics". Science (published August 12, 1966). 153 (3737): 699–708. Bibcode:1966Sci...153..699F. doi:10.1126/science.153.3737.699. PMID 17791121.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1974a). "Structure of the proton". Science. American Association for the Advancement of Science (published February 15, 1974). 183 (4125): 601–610. Bibcode:1974Sci...183..601F. doi:10.1126/science.183.4125.601. JSTOR 1737688. PMID 17778830. S2CID 9938227.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1974). "Cargo Cult Science" (PDF). Engineering and Science. 37 (7).
  • Feynman, Richard P.; Kleinert, Hagen (1986). "Effective classical partition functions" (PDF). Physical Review A (published December 1986). 34 (6): 5080–5084. Bibcode:1986PhRvA..34.5080F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.34.5080. PMID 9897894.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1986). Rogers Commission Report, Volume 2 Appendix F – Personal Observations on Reliability of Shuttle. NASA.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1988), "Difficulties in Applying the Variational Principle to Quantum Field Theories", in Polley, L.; Pottinger, D. E. L. (eds.), Variational Calculations in Quantum Field Theory, World Scientific (published August 1, 1988), pp. 28–40, doi:10.1142/9789814390187_0003, ISBN 9971-50-500-2 Proceedings of the International Workshop at Wangerooge Island, Germany; Sept 1–4, 1987.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (2000). Laurie M. Brown (ed.). Selected Papers of Richard Feynman: With Commentary. 20th Century Physics. World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-02-4131-5.

Textbooks and lecture notes edit

 
The Feynman Lectures on Physics including Feynman's Tips on Physics: The Definitive and Extended Edition (2nd edition, 2005)

The Feynman Lectures on Physics is perhaps his most accessible work for anyone with an interest in physics, compiled from lectures to Caltech undergraduates in 1961–1964. As news of the lectures' lucidity grew, professional physicists and graduate students began to drop in to listen. Co-authors Robert B. Leighton and Matthew Sands, colleagues of Feynman, edited and illustrated them into book form. The work has endured and is useful to this day. They were edited and supplemented in 2005 with Feynman's Tips on Physics: A Problem-Solving Supplement to the Feynman Lectures on Physics by Michael Gottlieb and Ralph Leighton (Robert Leighton's son), with support from Kip Thorne and other physicists.

  • Feynman, Richard P.; Leighton, Robert B.; Sands, Matthew (2005) [1970]. The Feynman Lectures on Physics: The Definitive and Extended Edition (2nd ed.). Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-8053-9045-6. Includes Feynman's Tips on Physics (with Michael Gottlieb and Ralph Leighton), which includes four previously unreleased lectures on problem solving, exercises by Robert Leighton and Rochus Vogt, and a historical essay by Matthew Sands. Three volumes; originally published as separate volumes in 1964 and 1966.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1961). Theory of Fundamental Processes. Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-8053-2507-7.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1962). Quantum Electrodynamics. Addison Wesley. ISBN 978-0-8053-2501-0.
  • Feynman, Richard P.; Hibbs, Albert (1965). Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals. McGraw Hill. ISBN 0-07-020650-3.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1967). The Character of Physical Law: The 1964 Messenger Lectures. MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-56003-8.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1972). Statistical Mechanics: A Set of Lectures. Reading, Mass: W. A. Benjamin. ISBN 0-8053-2509-3.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1985b). QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-02417-0.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1987). Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics: The 1986 Dirac Memorial Lectures. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-34000-4.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1995). Brian Hatfield (ed.). Lectures on Gravitation. Addison Wesley Longman. ISBN 0-201-62734-5.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1997). Feynman's Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun (Vintage Press ed.). London, England: Vintage. ISBN 0-09-973621-7.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (2000). Hey, Tony; Allen, Robin W. (eds.). Feynman Lectures on Computation. Perseus Books Group. ISBN 0-7382-0296-7. Computer science also differs from physics in that it is not actually a science. It does not study natural objects. Neither is it, as you might think, mathematics; although it does use mathematical reasoning pretty extensively. Rather, computer science is like engineering – it is all about getting something to do something, rather than just dealing with abstractions.

Popular works edit

  • Feynman, Richard P. (1985). Leighton, Ralph (ed.). Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!: Adventures of a Curious Character. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-01921-7. OCLC 10925248.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1988a). Leighton, Ralph (ed.). What Do You Care What Other People Think?: Further Adventures of a Curious Character. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-02659-0.
  • No Ordinary Genius: The Illustrated Richard Feynman, ed. Christopher Sykes, W. W. Norton & Company, 1996, ISBN 0-393-31393-X.
  • Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher, Perseus Books, 1994, ISBN 0-201-40955-0. Listed by the board of directors of the Modern Library as one of the 100 best nonfiction books.[217]
  • Six Not So Easy Pieces: Einstein's Relativity, Symmetry and Space-Time, Addison Wesley, 1997, ISBN 0-201-15026-3.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1998). The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist. Reading, Massachusetts: Perseus Publishing. ISBN 0-7382-0166-9.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1999). Robbins, Jeffrey (ed.). The Pleasure of Finding Things Out: The Best Short Works of Richard P. Feynman. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Perseus Books. ISBN 0-7382-0108-1.
  • Classic Feynman: All the Adventures of a Curious Character, edited by Ralph Leighton, W. W. Norton & Company, 2005, ISBN 0-393-06132-9. Chronologically reordered omnibus volume of Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! and What Do You Care What Other People Think?, with a bundled CD containing one of Feynman's signature lectures.

Audio and video recordings edit

  • Safecracker Suite (a collection of drum pieces interspersed with Feynman telling anecdotes)
  • Los Alamos From Below (audio, talk given by Feynman at Santa Barbara on February 6, 1975)
  • The Feynman Lectures on Physics: The Complete Audio Collection, selections from which were also released as Six Easy Pieces and Six Not So Easy Pieces
  • Samples of Feynman's drumming, chanting and speech are included in the songs "Tuva Groove (Bolur Daa-Bol, Bolbas Daa-Bol)" and "Kargyraa Rap (Dürgen Chugaa)" on the album Back Tuva Future, The Adventure Continues by Kongar-ool Ondar. The hidden track on this album also includes excerpts from lectures without musical background.
  • The Messenger Lectures, given at Cornell in 1964, in which he explains basic topics in physics;[218] adapted into the book The Character of Physical Law
  • Take the world from another point of view [videorecording] / with Richard Feynman; Films for the Hu (1972)
  • The Douglas Robb Memorial Lectures, four public lectures of which the four chapters of the book QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter are transcripts. (1979)
  • The Pleasure of Finding Things Out, BBC Horizon episode (1981) (not to be confused with the later published book of the same title)
  • Richard Feynman: Fun to Imagine Collection, BBC Archive of six short films of Feynman talking in a style that is accessible to all about the physics behind common to all experiences. (1983)
  • Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics (1986)
  • Tiny Machines: The Feynman Talk on Nanotechnology (video, 1984)
  • Computers From the Inside Out (video)
  • Quantum Mechanical View of Reality: Workshop at Esalen (video, 1983)
  • Idiosyncratic Thinking Workshop (video, 1985)
  • Bits and Pieces—From Richard's Life and Times (video, 1988)
  • Strangeness Minus Three (video, BBC Horizon 1964)
  • No Ordinary Genius (video, Cristopher Sykes Documentary)
  • Richard Feynman—The Best Mind Since Einstein (video, Documentary)
  • The Motion of Planets Around the Sun (audio, sometimes titled "Feynman's Lost Lecture")
  • Nature of Matter (audio)

References edit

  1. ^ Tindol, Robert (December 2, 1999). "Physics World poll names Richard Feynman one of 10 greatest physicists of all time" (Press release). California Institute of Technology. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "Richard P. Feynman – Biographical". The Nobel Foundation. from the original on July 1, 2006. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. (August 2002). "Richard Feynman (1918–1988) – Biography – MacTutor History of Mathematics". University of St. Andrews. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  4. ^ Oakes 2007, p. 231.
  5. ^ Chown 1985, p. 34.
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Sources edit

Further reading edit

Articles edit

  • Physics Today, American Institute of Physics magazine, February 1989 Issue. (Vol. 42, No. 2.) Special Feynman memorial issue containing non-technical articles on Feynman's life and work in physics.
  • Feynman, Richard P. (1987). Leighton, Ralph (ed.). "Mr. Feynman Goes to Washington". Engineering and Science. Caltech. 51 (1): 6–22. ISSN 0013-7812.

Books edit

Films and plays edit

  • Infinity (1996), a movie both directed by and starring Matthew Broderick as Feynman, depicting his love affair with his first wife and ending with the Trinity test.
  • Parnell, Peter (2002), QED, Applause Books, ISBN 978-1-55783-592-5 (play)
  • Whittell, Crispin (2006), Clever Dick, Oberon Books, (play)
  • "The Quest for Tannu Tuva", with Richard Feynman and Ralph Leighton. 1987, BBC Horizon and PBS Nova (entitled "Last Journey of a Genius").
  • No Ordinary Genius, a two-part documentary about Feynman's life and work, with contributions from colleagues, friends and family. 1993, BBC Horizon and PBS Nova (a one-hour version, under the title The Best Mind Since Einstein) (2 × 50-minute films)
  • The Challenger (2013), a BBC Two factual drama starring William Hurt, tells the story of American Nobel prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman's determination to reveal the truth behind the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
  • The Fantastic Mr Feynman. One hour documentary. 2013, BBC TV
  • How We Built The Bomb, a docudrama about The Manhattan Project at Los Alamos. Feynman is played by actor/playwright Michael Raver. 2015

External links edit

External videos
  Presentation by Michelle Feynman on Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track, May 9, 2005, C-SPAN
  • Official website
  • The Feynman Lectures on Physics Website by Michael Gottlieb, assisted by Rudolf Pfeiffer and Caltech
  • Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 4 March 1966, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives – Session I
  • Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 5 March 1966, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives – Session II
  • Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 27 June 1966, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives – Session III
  • Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 28 June 1966, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives – Session IV
  • Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 4 February 1973, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives – Session V
  • Additional Richard Feynman interviews (with and about) – American Institute of Physics
  • Feynman Online!, a site dedicated to Feynman

richard, feynman, feynman, redirects, here, other, uses, feynman, disambiguation, richard, phillips, feynman, 1918, february, 1988, american, theoretical, physicist, known, work, path, integral, formulation, quantum, mechanics, theory, quantum, electrodynamics. Feynman redirects here For other uses see Feynman disambiguation Richard Phillips Feynman ˈ f aɪ n m e n May 11 1918 February 15 1988 was an American theoretical physicist known for his work in the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics the theory of quantum electrodynamics the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium as well as his work in particle physics for which he proposed the parton model For his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics Feynman received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965 jointly with Julian Schwinger and Shin ichirō Tomonaga Richard FeynmanFeynman c 1965BornRichard Phillips Feynman 1918 05 11 May 11 1918New York City U S DiedFebruary 15 1988 1988 02 15 aged 69 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeMountain View Cemetery and MausoleumEducationMassachusetts Institute of Technology SB Princeton University PhD Known forManhattan ProjectAcoustic wave equationBethe Feynman formulaFeynman checkerboardFeynman diagramsFeynman gaugeFeynman Kac formulaFeynman parametrizationFeynman pointFeynman propagatorFeynman slash notationFeynman sprinklerHellmann Feynman theoremHeaviside Feynman formulaV A theoryBrownian ratchetFeynman Stueckelberg interpretationNanotechnologyOne electron universePartonPath integral formulationPlaying the bongosQuantum cellular automataQuantum computingQuantum dissipationQuantum electrodynamicsQuantum hydrodynamicsQuantum logic gatesQuantum turbulenceResummationRogers CommissionShaft passerSticky bead argumentSynthetic molecular motorThe Feynman Lectures on PhysicsUniversal quantum simulatorVortex ring modelWheeler Feynman absorber theoryVariational perturbation theorySpousesArline Greenbaum m 1942 died 1945 wbr Mary Louise Bell m 1952 div 1958 wbr Gweneth Howarth m 1960 wbr Children2AwardsAlbert Einstein Award 1954 E O Lawrence Award 1962 Nobel Prize in Physics 1965 Foreign Member of the Royal Society 1965 Oersted Medal 1972 National Medal of Science 1979 Scientific careerFieldsTheoretical physicsInstitutionsCornell University California Institute of TechnologyThesisThe Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics 1942 Doctoral advisorJohn Archibald WheelerDoctoral studentsJames M Bardeen Laurie Mark Brown Thomas Curtright Albert Hibbs Giovanni Rossi Lomanitz George ZweigOther notable studentsRobert Barro W Daniel Hillis Douglas D Osheroff Paul Steinhardt Peter Shor Stephen WolframSignatureFeynman developed a widely used pictorial representation scheme for the mathematical expressions describing the behavior of subatomic particles which later became known as Feynman diagrams During his lifetime Feynman became one of the best known scientists in the world In a 1999 poll of 130 leading physicists worldwide by the British journal Physics World he was ranked the seventh greatest physicist of all time 1 He assisted in the development of the atomic bomb during World War II and became known to the wider public in the 1980s as a member of the Rogers Commission the panel that investigated the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster Along with his work in theoretical physics Feynman has been credited with pioneering the field of quantum computing and introducing the concept of nanotechnology He held the Richard C Tolman professorship in theoretical physics at the California Institute of Technology Feynman was a keen popularizer of physics through both books and lectures including a 1959 talk on top down nanotechnology called There s Plenty of Room at the Bottom and the three volume publication of his undergraduate lectures The Feynman Lectures on Physics Feynman also became known through his autobiographical books Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman and What Do You Care What Other People Think and books written about him such as Tuva or Bust by Ralph Leighton and the biography Genius The Life and Science of Richard Feynman by James Gleick Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Religion 2 Education 3 Manhattan Project 4 Cornell 5 Caltech years 5 1 Personal and political life 5 2 Physics 5 3 Machine technology 5 4 Pedagogy 5 5 Case before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 5 6 Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman 5 7 Challenger disaster 5 8 Recognition and awards 6 Death 7 Popular legacy 8 Bibliography 8 1 Selected scientific works 8 2 Textbooks and lecture notes 8 3 Popular works 8 4 Audio and video recordings 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Articles 11 2 Books 11 3 Films and plays 12 External linksEarly life editFeynman was born on May 11 1918 in New York City 2 to Lucille nee Phillips 1895 1981 a homemaker and Melville Arthur Feynman 1890 1946 a sales manager 3 Feynman s father was born into a Jewish family in Minsk Russian Empire 4 and emigrated with his parents to the United States at the age of five Feynman s mother was born in the United States into a Jewish family Lucille s father had emigrated from Poland and her mother also came from a family of Polish immigrants She trained as a primary school teacher but married Melville in 1917 before taking up a profession 2 3 Feynman was a late talker and did not speak until after his third birthday As an adult he spoke with a New York accent 5 6 strong enough to be perceived as an affectation or exaggeration 7 8 so much so that his friends Wolfgang Pauli and Hans Bethe once commented that Feynman spoke like a bum 7 The young Feynman was heavily influenced by his father who encouraged him to ask questions to challenge orthodox thinking and who was always ready to teach Feynman something new From his mother he gained the sense of humor that he had throughout his life As a child he had a talent for engineering 9 maintained an experimental laboratory in his home and delighted in repairing radios This radio repairing was probably the first job Feynman had and during this time he showed early signs of an aptitude for his later career in theoretical physics when he would analyze the issues theoretically and arrive at the solutions 10 When he was in grade school he created a home burglar alarm system while his parents were out for the day running errands 11 When Richard was five his mother gave birth to a younger brother Henry Phillips who died at age four weeks 12 Four years later Richard s sister Joan was born and the family moved to Far Rockaway Queens 3 Though separated by nine years Joan and Richard were close and they both shared a curiosity about the world 13 Though their mother thought women lacked the capacity to understand such things Richard encouraged Joan s interest in astronomy and Joan eventually became an astrophysicist 14 Religion edit Feynman s parents were both from Jewish families 3 and his family went to the synagogue every Friday 15 However by his youth Feynman described himself as an avowed atheist 16 17 Many years later in a letter to Tina Levitan declining a request for information for her book on Jewish Nobel Prize winners he stated To select for approbation the peculiar elements that come from some supposedly Jewish heredity is to open the door to all kinds of nonsense on racial theory adding at thirteen I was not only converted to other religious views but I also stopped believing that the Jewish people are in any way the chosen people 18 Later in life during a visit to the Jewish Theological Seminary Feynman encountered the Talmud for the first time He saw that it contained the original text in a little square on the page and surrounding it were commentaries written over time by different people In this way the Talmud had evolved and everything that was discussed was carefully recorded Despite being impressed Feynman was disappointed with the lack of interest for nature and the outside world expressed by the rabbis who cared about only those questions which arise from the Talmud 19 Education editFeynman attended Far Rockaway High School which was also attended by fellow Nobel laureates Burton Richter and Baruch Samuel Blumberg 20 Upon starting high school Feynman was quickly promoted to a higher math class An IQ test administered in high school estimated his IQ at 125 high but merely respectable according to biographer James Gleick 21 22 His sister Joan who scored one point higher later jokingly claimed to an interviewer that she was smarter Years later he declined to join Mensa International saying that his IQ was too low 23 When Feynman was 15 he taught himself trigonometry advanced algebra infinite series analytic geometry and both differential and integral calculus 24 Before entering college he was experimenting with mathematical topics such as the half derivative using his own notation 25 He created special symbols for logarithm sine cosine and tangent functions so they did not look like three variables multiplied together and for the derivative to remove the temptation of canceling out the d displaystyle d nbsp s in d d x displaystyle d dx nbsp 26 27 A member of the Arista Honor Society in his last year in high school he won the New York University Math Championship 28 His habit of direct characterization sometimes rattled more conventional thinkers for example one of his questions when learning feline anatomy was Do you have a map of the cat referring to an anatomical chart 29 Feynman applied to Columbia University but was not accepted because of their quota for the number of Jews admitted 3 Instead he attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he joined the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity 30 Although he originally majored in mathematics he later switched to electrical engineering as he considered mathematics to be too abstract Noticing that he had gone too far he then switched to physics which he claimed was somewhere in between 31 As an undergraduate he published two papers in the Physical Review 28 One of these which was co written with Manuel Vallarta was entitled The Scattering of Cosmic Rays by the Stars of a Galaxy 32 Vallarta let his student in on a secret of mentor protege publishing the senior scientist s name comes first Feynman had his revenge a few years later when Heisenberg concluded an entire book on cosmic rays with the phrase such an effect is not to be expected according to Vallarta and Feynman When they next met Feynman asked gleefully whether Vallarta had seen Heisenberg s book Vallarta knew why Feynman was grinning Yes he replied You re the last word in cosmic rays 33 The other was his senior thesis on Forces in Molecules 34 based on a topic assigned by John C Slater who was sufficiently impressed by the paper to have it published Its main result is known as the Hellmann Feynman theorem 35 In 1939 Feynman received a bachelor s degree 36 and was named a Putnam Fellow 37 He attained a perfect score on the graduate school entrance exams to Princeton University in physics an unprecedented feat and an outstanding score in mathematics but did poorly on the history and English portions The head of the physics department there Henry D Smyth had another concern writing to Philip M Morse to ask Is Feynman Jewish We have no definite rule against Jews but have to keep their proportion in our department reasonably small because of the difficulty of placing them 38 Morse conceded that Feynman was indeed Jewish but reassured Smyth that Feynman s physiognomy and manner however show no trace of this characteristic 38 Attendees at Feynman s first seminar which was on the classical version of the Wheeler Feynman absorber theory included Albert Einstein Wolfgang Pauli and John von Neumann Pauli made the prescient comment that the theory would be extremely difficult to quantize and Einstein said that one might try to apply this method to gravity in general relativity 39 which Sir Fred Hoyle and Jayant Narlikar did much later as the Hoyle Narlikar theory of gravity 40 41 Feynman received a PhD from Princeton in 1942 his thesis advisor was John Archibald Wheeler 42 In his doctoral thesis entitled The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics 43 Feynman applied the principle of stationary action to problems of quantum mechanics inspired by a desire to quantize the Wheeler Feynman absorber theory of electrodynamics and laid the groundwork for the path integral formulation and Feynman diagrams 44 A key insight was that positrons behaved like electrons moving backwards in time 44 James Gleick wrote This was Richard Feynman nearing the crest of his powers At twenty three there may now have been no physicist on earth who could match his exuberant command over the native materials of theoretical science It was not just a facility at mathematics though it had become clear that the mathematical machinery emerging in the Wheeler Feynman collaboration was beyond Wheeler s own ability Feynman seemed to possess a frightening ease with the substance behind the equations like Einstein at the same age like the Soviet physicist Lev Landau but few others 42 One of the conditions of Feynman s scholarship to Princeton was that he could not be married nevertheless he continued to see his high school sweetheart Arline Greenbaum and was determined to marry her once he had been awarded his PhD despite the knowledge that she was seriously ill with tuberculosis This was an incurable disease at the time and she was not expected to live more than two years On June 29 1942 they took the ferry to Staten Island where they were married in the city office The ceremony was attended by neither family nor friends and was witnessed by a pair of strangers Feynman could kiss Arline only on the cheek After the ceremony he took her to Deborah Hospital where he visited her on weekends 45 46 Manhattan Project edit nbsp Feynman s Los Alamos ID badgeIn 1941 with World War II raging in Europe but the United States not yet at war Feynman spent the summer working on ballistics problems at the Frankford Arsenal in Pennsylvania 47 48 After the attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into the war Feynman was recruited by Robert R Wilson who was working on means to produce enriched uranium for use in an atomic bomb as part of what would become the Manhattan Project 49 50 At the time Feynman had not earned a graduate degree 51 Wilson s team at Princeton was working on a device called an isotron intended to electromagnetically separate uranium 235 from uranium 238 This was done in a quite different manner from that used by the calutron that was under development by a team under Wilson s former mentor Ernest O Lawrence at the Radiation Laboratory of the University of California On paper the isotron was many times more efficient than the calutron but Feynman and Paul Olum struggled to determine whether it was practical Ultimately on Lawrence s recommendation the isotron project was abandoned 52 At this juncture in early 1943 Robert Oppenheimer was establishing the Los Alamos Laboratory a secret laboratory on a mesa in New Mexico where atomic bombs would be designed and built An offer was made to the Princeton team to be redeployed there Like a bunch of professional soldiers Wilson later recalled we signed up en masse to go to Los Alamos 53 Like many other young physicists Feynman soon fell under the spell of the charismatic Oppenheimer who telephoned Feynman long distance from Chicago to inform him that he had found a Presbyterian sanatorium in Albuquerque New Mexico for Arline They were among the first to depart for New Mexico leaving on a train on March 28 1943 The railroad supplied Arline with a wheelchair and Feynman paid extra for a private room for her There they spent their wedding anniversary 54 At Los Alamos Feynman was assigned to Hans Bethe s Theoretical T Division 55 and impressed Bethe enough to be made a group leader 56 He and Bethe developed the Bethe Feynman formula for calculating the yield of a fission bomb which built upon previous work by Robert Serber 57 As a junior physicist he was not central to the project He administered the computation group of human computers in the theoretical division With Stanley Frankel and Nicholas Metropolis he assisted in establishing a system for using IBM punched cards for computation 58 He invented a new method of computing logarithms that he later used on the Connection Machine 59 60 An avid drummer Feynman figured out how to get the machine to click in musical rhythms 61 Other work at Los Alamos included calculating neutron equations for the Los Alamos Water Boiler a small nuclear reactor to measure how close an assembly of fissile material was to criticality 62 On completing this work Feynman was sent to the Clinton Engineer Works in Oak Ridge Tennessee where the Manhattan Project had its uranium enrichment facilities He aided the engineers there in devising safety procedures for material storage so that criticality accidents could be avoided especially when enriched uranium came into contact with water which acted as a neutron moderator He insisted on giving the rank and file a lecture on nuclear physics so that they would realize the dangers 63 He explained that while any amount of unenriched uranium could be safely stored the enriched uranium had to be carefully handled He developed a series of safety recommendations for the various grades of enrichments 64 He was told that if the people at Oak Ridge gave him any difficulty with his proposals he was to inform them that Los Alamos could not be responsible for their safety otherwise 65 nbsp At the 1946 colloquium on the Super at the Los Alamos Laboratory Feynman is in the second row fourth from left next to Oppenheimer Returning to Los Alamos Feynman was put in charge of the group responsible for the theoretical work and calculations on the proposed uranium hydride bomb which ultimately proved to be infeasible 56 66 He was sought out by physicist Niels Bohr for one on one discussions He later discovered the reason most of the other physicists were too much in awe of Bohr to argue with him Feynman had no such inhibitions vigorously pointing out anything he considered to be flawed in Bohr s thinking He said he felt as much respect for Bohr as anyone else but once anyone got him talking about physics he would become so focused he forgot about social niceties Perhaps because of this Bohr never warmed to Feynman 67 68 At Los Alamos which was isolated for security Feynman amused himself by investigating the combination locks on the cabinets and desks of physicists He often found that they left the lock combinations on the factory settings wrote the combinations down or used easily guessable combinations like dates 69 He found one cabinet s combination by trying numbers he thought a physicist might use it proved to be 27 18 28 after the base of natural logarithms e 2 71828 and found that the three filing cabinets where a colleague kept research notes all had the same combination He left notes in the cabinets as a prank spooking his colleague Frederic de Hoffmann into thinking a spy had gained access to them 70 Feynman s 380 equivalent to 6 000 in 2022 monthly salary was about half the amount needed for his modest living expenses and Arline s medical bills and they were forced to dip into her 3 300 equivalent to 56 000 in 2022 in savings 71 On weekends he borrowed a car from his friend Klaus Fuchs to drive to Albuquerque to see Arline 72 73 Asked who at Los Alamos was most likely to be a spy Fuchs mentioned Feynman s safe cracking and frequent trips to Albuquerque 72 Fuchs himself later confessed to spying for the Soviet Union 74 The FBI would compile a bulky file on Feynman 75 particularly in view of Feynman s Q clearance 76 nbsp Feynman center with Robert Oppenheimer immediately right of Feynman at a Los Alamos Laboratory social function during the Manhattan Project Informed that Arline was dying Feynman drove to Albuquerque and sat with her for hours until she died on June 16 1945 77 He then immersed himself in work on the project and was present at the Trinity nuclear test Feynman claimed to be the only person to see the explosion without the very dark glasses or welder s lenses provided reasoning that it was safe to look through a truck windshield as it would screen out the harmful ultraviolet radiation The immense brightness of the explosion made him duck to the truck s floor where he saw a temporary purple splotch afterimage 78 Cornell editFeynman nominally held an appointment at the University of Wisconsin Madison as an assistant professor of physics but was on unpaid leave during his involvement in the Manhattan Project 79 In 1945 he received a letter from Dean Mark Ingraham of the College of Letters and Science requesting his return to the university to teach in the coming academic year His appointment was not extended when he did not commit to returning In a talk given there several years later Feynman quipped It s great to be back at the only university that ever had the good sense to fire me 80 As early as October 30 1943 Bethe had written to the chairman of the physics department of his university Cornell to recommend that Feynman be hired On February 28 1944 this was endorsed by Robert Bacher 81 also from Cornell 82 and one of the most senior scientists at Los Alamos 83 This led to an offer being made in August 1944 which Feynman accepted Oppenheimer had also hoped to recruit Feynman to the University of California but the head of the physics department Raymond T Birge was reluctant He made Feynman an offer in May 1945 but Feynman turned it down Cornell matched its salary offer of 3 900 equivalent to 63 000 in 2022 per annum 81 Feynman became one of the first of the Los Alamos Laboratory s group leaders to depart leaving for Ithaca New York in October 1945 84 Because Feynman was no longer working at the Los Alamos Laboratory he was no longer exempt from the draft At his induction physical Army psychiatrists diagnosed Feynman as suffering from a mental illness and the Army gave him a 4 F exemption on mental grounds 85 86 His father died suddenly on October 8 1946 and Feynman suffered from depression 87 On October 17 1946 he wrote a letter to Arline expressing his deep love and heartbreak The letter was sealed and only opened after his death Please excuse my not mailing this the letter concluded but I don t know your new address 88 Unable to focus on research problems Feynman began tackling physics problems not for utility but for self satisfaction 87 One of these involved analyzing the physics of a twirling nutating disk as it is moving through the air inspired by an incident in the cafeteria at Cornell when someone tossed a dinner plate in the air 89 He read the work of Sir William Rowan Hamilton on quaternions and tried unsuccessfully to use them to formulate a relativistic theory of electrons His work during this period which used equations of rotation to express various spinning speeds ultimately proved important to his Nobel Prize winning work yet because he felt burned out and had turned his attention to less immediately practical problems he was surprised by the offers of professorships from other renowned universities including the Institute for Advanced Study the University of California Los Angeles and the University of California Berkeley 87 nbsp Feynman diagram of electron positron annihilationFeynman was not the only frustrated theoretical physicist in the early post war years Quantum electrodynamics suffered from infinite integrals in perturbation theory These were clear mathematical flaws in the theory which Feynman and Wheeler had tried unsuccessfully to work around 90 Theoreticians noted Murray Gell Mann were in disgrace 91 In June 1947 leading American physicists met at the Shelter Island Conference For Feynman it was his first big conference with big men I had never gone to one like this one in peacetime 92 The problems plaguing quantum electrodynamics were discussed but the theoreticians were completely overshadowed by the achievements of the experimentalists who reported the discovery of the Lamb shift the measurement of the magnetic moment of the electron and Robert Marshak s two meson hypothesis 93 Bethe took the lead from the work of Hans Kramers and derived a renormalized non relativistic quantum equation for the Lamb shift The next step was to create a relativistic version Feynman thought that he could do this but when he went back to Bethe with his solution it did not converge 94 Feynman carefully worked through the problem again applying the path integral formulation that he had used in his thesis Like Bethe he made the integral finite by applying a cut off term The result corresponded to Bethe s version 95 96 Feynman presented his work to his peers at the Pocono Conference in 1948 It did not go well Julian Schwinger gave a long presentation of his work in quantum electrodynamics and Feynman then offered his version entitled Alternative Formulation of Quantum Electrodynamics The unfamiliar Feynman diagrams used for the first time puzzled the audience Feynman failed to get his point across and Paul Dirac Edward Teller and Niels Bohr all raised objections 97 98 To Freeman Dyson one thing at least was clear Shin ichirō Tomonaga Schwinger and Feynman understood what they were talking about even if no one else did but had not published anything He was convinced that Feynman s formulation was easier to understand and ultimately managed to convince Oppenheimer that this was the case 99 Dyson published a paper in 1949 which added new rules to Feynman s that told how to implement renormalization 100 Feynman was prompted to publish his ideas in the Physical Review in a series of papers over three years 101 His 1948 papers on A Relativistic Cut Off for Classical Electrodynamics attempted to explain what he had been unable to get across at Pocono 102 His 1949 paper on The Theory of Positrons addressed the Schrodinger equation and Dirac equation and introduced what is now called the Feynman propagator 103 Finally in papers on the Mathematical Formulation of the Quantum Theory of Electromagnetic Interaction in 1950 and An Operator Calculus Having Applications in Quantum Electrodynamics in 1951 he developed the mathematical basis of his ideas derived familiar formulae and advanced new ones 104 While papers by others initially cited Schwinger papers citing Feynman and employing Feynman diagrams appeared in 1950 and soon became prevalent 105 Students learned and used the powerful new tool that Feynman had created Computer programs were later written to evaluate Feynman diagrams enabling physicists to use quantum field theory to make high precision predictions 106 Marc Kac adapted Feynman s technique of summing over possible histories of a particle to the study of parabolic partial differential equations yielding what is now known as the Feynman Kac formula the use of which extends beyond physics to many applications of stochastic processes 107 To Schwinger however the Feynman diagram was pedagogy not physics 108 By 1949 Feynman was becoming restless at Cornell He never settled into a particular house or apartment living in guest houses or student residences or with married friends until these arrangements became sexually volatile 109 He liked to date undergraduates hire prostitutes and sleep with the wives of friends 110 He was not fond of Ithaca s cold winter weather and pined for a warmer climate 111 Above all he was always in the shadow of Hans Bethe at Cornell 109 Despite all of this Feynman looked back favorably on the Telluride House where he resided for a large period of his Cornell career In an interview he described the House as a group of boys that have been specially selected because of their scholarship because of their cleverness or whatever it is to be given free board and lodging and so on because of their brains He enjoyed the house s convenience and said that it s there that I did the fundamental work for which he won the Nobel Prize 112 113 Caltech years editPersonal and political life edit Feynman spent several weeks in Rio de Janeiro in July 1949 114 That year the Soviet Union detonated its first atomic bomb generating concerns about espionage 115 Fuchs was arrested as a Soviet spy in 1950 and the FBI questioned Bethe about Feynman s loyalty 116 Physicist David Bohm was arrested on December 4 1950 117 and emigrated to Brazil in October 1951 118 Because of the fears of a nuclear war a girlfriend told Feynman that he should also consider moving to South America 115 He had a sabbatical coming for 1951 1952 119 and elected to spend it in Brazil where he gave courses at the Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Fisicas nbsp Feynman with drumsIn Brazil Feynman was impressed with samba music and learned to play the frigideira 120 a metal percussion instrument based on a frying pan 121 He was an enthusiastic amateur player of bongo and conga drums and often played them in the pit orchestra in musicals 122 123 He spent time in Rio with his friend Bohm but Bohm could not convince Feynman to investigate Bohm s ideas on physics 124 Feynman did not return to Cornell Bacher who had been instrumental in bringing Feynman to Cornell had lured him to the California Institute of Technology Caltech Part of the deal was that he could spend his first year on sabbatical in Brazil 125 109 He had become smitten by Mary Louise Bell from Neodesha Kansas They had met in a cafeteria in Cornell where she had studied the history of Mexican art and textiles She later followed him to Caltech where he gave a lecture While he was in Brazil she taught classes on the history of furniture and interiors at Michigan State University He proposed to her by mail from Rio de Janeiro and they married in Boise Idaho on June 28 1952 shortly after he returned They frequently quarreled and she was frightened by his violent temper Their politics were different although he registered and voted as a Republican she was more conservative and her opinion on the 1954 Oppenheimer security hearing Where there s smoke there s fire offended him They separated on May 20 1956 An interlocutory decree of divorce was entered on June 19 1956 on the grounds of extreme cruelty The divorce became final on May 5 1958 126 127 He begins working calculus problems in his head as soon as he awakens He did calculus while driving in his car while sitting in the living room and while lying in bed at night Mary Louise Bell divorce complaint 128 In the wake of the 1957 Sputnik crisis the U S government s interest in science rose for a time Feynman was considered for a seat on the President s Science Advisory Committee but was not appointed At this time the FBI interviewed a woman close to Feynman possibly his ex wife Bell who sent a written statement to J Edgar Hoover on August 8 1958 I do not know but I believe that Richard Feynman is either a Communist or very strongly pro Communist and as such is a very definite security risk This man is in my opinion an extremely complex and dangerous person a very dangerous person to have in a position of public trust In matters of intrigue Richard Feynman is I believe immensely clever indeed a genius and he is I further believe completely ruthless unhampered by morals ethics or religion and will stop at absolutely nothing to achieve his ends 127 The U S government nevertheless sent Feynman to Geneva for the September 1958 Atoms for Peace Conference On the beach at Lake Geneva he met Gweneth Howarth who was from Ripponden Yorkshire and working in Switzerland as an au pair Feynman s love life had been turbulent since his divorce his previous girlfriend had walked off with his Albert Einstein Award medal and on the advice of an earlier girlfriend had feigned pregnancy and extorted him into paying for an abortion then used the money to buy furniture When Feynman found that Howarth was being paid only 25 a month he offered her 20 equivalent to 202 in 2022 a week to be his live in maid Feynman knew that this sort of behavior was illegal under the Mann Act so he had a friend Matthew Sands act as her sponsor Howarth pointed out that she already had two boyfriends but decided to take Feynman up on his offer and arrived in Altadena California in June 1959 She made a point of dating other men but Feynman proposed in early 1960 They were married on September 24 1960 at the Huntington Hotel in Pasadena They had a son Carl in 1962 and adopted a daughter Michelle in 1968 129 130 Besides their home in Altadena they had a beach house in Baja California purchased with the money from Feynman s Nobel Prize 131 Feynman tried marijuana and ketamine at John Lilly s sensory deprivation tanks as a way of studying consciousness 132 133 He gave up alcohol when he began to show vague early signs of alcoholism as he did not want to do anything that could damage his brain Despite his curiosity about hallucinations he was reluctant to experiment with LSD 134 Feynman had synesthesia and said that mathematical symbols had different colors for him When I see equations I see the letters in colors I don t know why I see vague pictures of Bessel functions with light tan j s slightly violet bluish n s and dark brown x s flying around 135 There had been protests over his alleged sexism in 1968 and again in 1972 Although there is no evidence he supported discrimination against women in science protestors objected to his use of sexist stories about lady drivers and clueless women in his lectures 136 137 Feynman recalled protesters entering a hall and picketing a lecture he was about to make in San Francisco calling him a sexist pig Seeing the protesters as Feynman later recalled the incident he addressed institutional sexism by saying that women do indeed suffer prejudice and discrimination in physics and your presence here today serves to remind us of these difficulties and the need to remedy them 138 Physics edit At Caltech Feynman investigated the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium where helium seems to display a complete lack of viscosity when flowing Feynman provided a quantum mechanical explanation for the Soviet physicist Lev Landau s theory of superfluidity 139 Applying the Schrodinger equation to the question showed that the superfluid was displaying quantum mechanical behavior observable on a macroscopic scale This helped with the problem of superconductivity but the solution eluded Feynman 140 It was solved with the BCS theory of superconductivity proposed by John Bardeen Leon Neil Cooper and John Robert Schrieffer in 1957 139 nbsp Feynman at the Robert Treat Paine Estate in Waltham Massachusetts in 1984Feynman inspired by a desire to quantize the Wheeler Feynman absorber theory of electrodynamics laid the groundwork for the path integral formulation and Feynman diagrams 44 With Murray Gell Mann Feynman developed a model of weak decay which showed that the current coupling in the process is a combination of vector and axial currents an example of weak decay is the decay of a neutron into an electron a proton and an antineutrino Although E C George Sudarshan and Robert Marshak developed the theory nearly simultaneously Feynman s collaboration with Gell Mann was seen as seminal because the weak interaction was neatly described by the vector and axial currents It thus combined the 1933 beta decay theory of Enrico Fermi with an explanation of parity violation 141 Feynman attempted an explanation called the parton model of the strong interactions governing nucleon scattering The parton model emerged as a complement to the quark model developed by Gell Mann The relationship between the two models was murky Gell Mann referred to Feynman s partons derisively as put ons In the mid 1960s physicists believed that quarks were just a bookkeeping device for symmetry numbers not real particles the statistics of the omega minus particle if it were interpreted as three identical strange quarks bound together seemed impossible if quarks were real 142 143 The SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory deep inelastic scattering experiments of the late 1960s showed that nucleons protons and neutrons contained point like particles that scattered electrons It was natural to identify these with quarks but Feynman s parton model attempted to interpret the experimental data in a way that did not introduce additional hypotheses For example the data showed that some 45 of the energy momentum was carried by electrically neutral particles in the nucleon These electrically neutral particles are now seen to be the gluons that carry the forces between the quarks and their three valued color quantum number solves the omega minus problem Feynman did not dispute the quark model for example when the fifth quark was discovered in 1977 Feynman immediately pointed out to his students that the discovery implied the existence of a sixth quark which was discovered in the decade after his death 142 144 After the success of quantum electrodynamics Feynman turned to quantum gravity By analogy with the photon which has spin 1 he investigated the consequences of a free massless spin 2 field and derived the Einstein field equation of general relativity but little more The computational device that Feynman discovered then for gravity ghosts which are particles in the interior of his diagrams that have the wrong connection between spin and statistics have proved invaluable in explaining the quantum particle behavior of the Yang Mills theories for example quantum chromodynamics and the electro weak theory 145 He did work on all four of the fundamental interactions of nature electromagnetic the weak force the strong force and gravity John and Mary Gribbin state in their book on Feynman that Nobody else has made such influential contributions to the investigation of all four of the interactions 146 Partly as a way to bring publicity to progress in physics Feynman offered 1 000 prizes for two of his challenges in nanotechnology one was claimed by William McLellan and the other by Tom Newman 147 Feynman was also interested in the relationship between physics and computation He was also one of the first scientists to conceive the possibility of quantum computers 148 149 150 In the 1980s he began to spend his summers working at Thinking Machines Corporation helping to build some of the first parallel supercomputers and considering the construction of quantum computers 151 152 In 1984 1986 he developed a variational method for the approximate calculation of path integrals which has led to a powerful method of converting divergent perturbation expansions into convergent strong coupling expansions variational perturbation theory and as a consequence to the most accurate determination 153 of critical exponents measured in satellite experiments 154 At Caltech he once chalked What I cannot create I do not understand on his blackboard 155 Machine technology edit Feynman had studied the ideas of John von Neumann while researching quantum field theory His most famous lecture on the subject was delivered in 1959 at the California Institute of Technology published under the title There s Plenty of Room at the Bottom a year later In this lecture he theorized on future opportunities for designing miniaturized machines which could build smaller reproductions of themselves This lecture is frequently cited in technical literature on microtechnology and nanotechnology 156 Pedagogy edit nbsp Feynman during a lectureIn the early 1960s Feynman acceded to a request to spruce up the teaching of undergraduates at the California Institute of Technology also called Caltech After three years devoted to the task he produced a series of lectures that later became The Feynman Lectures on Physics Accounts vary about how successful the original lectures were Feynman s own preface written just after an exam on which the students did poorly was somewhat pessimistic His colleagues David L Goodstein and Gerry Neugebauer said later that the intended audience of first year students found the material intimidating while older students and faculty found it inspirational so the lecture hall remained full even as the first year students dropped away In contrast physicist Matthew Sands recalled the student attendance as being typical for a large lecture course 157 Converting the lectures into books occupied Matthew Sands and Robert B Leighton as part time co authors for several years Feynman suggested that the book cover should have a picture of a drum with mathematical diagrams about vibrations drawn upon it in order to illustrate the application of mathematics to understanding the world Instead the publishers gave the books plain red covers though they included a picture of Feynman playing drums in the foreword 158 Even though the books were not adopted by universities as textbooks they continue to sell well because they provide a deep understanding of physics 159 Many of Feynman s lectures and miscellaneous talks were turned into other books including The Character of Physical Law QED The Strange Theory of Light and Matter Statistical Mechanics Lectures on Gravitation and the Feynman Lectures on Computation 160 Feynman wrote about his experiences teaching physics undergraduates in Brazil The students studying habits and the Portuguese language textbooks were so devoid of any context or applications for their information that in Feynman s opinion the students were not learning physics at all At the end of the year Feynman was invited to give a lecture on his teaching experiences and he agreed to do so provided he could speak frankly which he did 161 162 Feynman opposed rote learning or unthinking memorization as well as other teaching methods that emphasized form over function In his mind clear thinking and clear presentation were fundamental prerequisites for his attention It could be perilous even to approach him unprepared and he did not forget fools and pretenders 163 In 1964 he served on the California State Curriculum Commission which was responsible for approving textbooks to be used by schools in California He was not impressed with what he found 164 Many of the mathematics texts covered subjects of use only to pure mathematicians as part of the New Math Elementary students were taught about sets but It will perhaps surprise most people who have studied these textbooks to discover that the symbol or representing union and intersection of sets and the special use of the brackets and so forth all the elaborate notation for sets that is given in these books almost never appear in any writings in theoretical physics in engineering in business arithmetic computer design or other places where mathematics is being used I see no need or reason for this all to be explained or to be taught in school It is not a useful way to express one s self It is not a cogent and simple way It is claimed to be precise but precise for what purpose 165 In April 1966 Feynman delivered an address to the National Science Teachers Association in which he suggested how students could be made to think like scientists be open minded curious and especially to doubt In the course of the lecture he gave a definition of science which he said came about by several stages The evolution of intelligent life on planet Earth creatures such as cats that play and learn from experience The evolution of humans who came to use language to pass knowledge from one individual to the next so that the knowledge was not lost when an individual died Unfortunately incorrect knowledge could be passed down as well as correct knowledge so another step was needed Galileo and others started doubting the truth of what was passed down and to investigate ab initio from experience what the true situation was this was science 166 In 1974 Feynman delivered the Caltech commencement address on the topic of cargo cult science which has the semblance of science but is only pseudoscience due to a lack of a kind of scientific integrity a principle of scientific thought that corresponds to a kind of utter honesty on the part of the scientist He instructed the graduating class that The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool So you have to be very careful about that After you ve not fooled yourself it s easy not to fool other scientists You just have to be honest in a conventional way after that 167 Feynman served as doctoral advisor to 30 students 168 Case before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission edit In 1977 Feynman supported his colleague Jenijoy La Belle who had been hired as Caltech s first female professor in 1969 and filed suit with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission after she was refused tenure in 1974 The EEOC ruled against Caltech in 1977 adding that La Belle had been paid less than male colleagues La Belle finally received tenure in 1979 Many of Feynman s colleagues were surprised that he took her side but he had gotten to know La Belle and liked and admired her 136 169 Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman edit Main article Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman In the 1960s Feynman began thinking of writing an autobiography and he began granting interviews to historians In the 1980s working with Ralph Leighton Robert Leighton s son he recorded chapters on audio tape that Ralph transcribed The book was published in 1985 as Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman and became a best seller 170 Gell Mann was upset by Feynman s account in the book of the weak interaction work and threatened to sue resulting in a correction being inserted in later editions 171 This incident was just the latest provocation in decades of bad feeling between the two scientists Gell Mann often expressed frustration at the attention Feynman received 172 he remarked Feynman was a great scientist but he spent a great deal of his effort generating anecdotes about himself 173 Feynman has been criticized for a chapter in the book entitled You Just Ask Them where he describes how he learned to seduce women at a bar he went to in the summer of 1946 A mentor taught him to ask a woman if she would sleep with him before buying her anything He describes seeing women at the bar as bitches in his thoughts and tells a story of how he told a woman named Ann that she was worse than a whore after Ann persuaded him to buy her sandwiches by telling him he could eat them at her place but then after he bought them saying they actually could not eat together because another man was coming over Later on that same evening Ann returned to the bar to take Feynman to her place 174 175 176 Feynman states at the end of the chapter that this behaviour was not typical of him So it worked even with an ordinary girl But no matter how effective the lesson was I never really used it after that I didn t enjoy doing it that way But it was interesting to know that things worked much differently from how I was brought up 113 Challenger disaster edit Main article Space Shuttle Challenger disaster nbsp The 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disasterFeynman played an important role on the Presidential Rogers Commission which investigated the 1986 Challenger disaster He had been reluctant to participate but was persuaded by advice from his wife 177 Feynman clashed several times with commission chairman William P Rogers During a break in one hearing Rogers told commission member Neil Armstrong Feynman is becoming a pain in the ass 178 During a televised hearing Feynman demonstrated that the material used in the shuttle s O rings became less resilient in cold weather by compressing a sample of the material in a clamp and immersing it in ice cold water 179 The commission ultimately determined that the disaster was caused by the primary O ring not properly sealing in unusually cold weather at Cape Canaveral 180 Feynman devoted the latter half of his 1988 book What Do You Care What Other People Think to his experience on the Rogers Commission straying from his usual convention of brief light hearted anecdotes to deliver an extended and sober narrative Feynman s account reveals a disconnect between NASA s engineers and executives that was far more striking than he expected His interviews of NASA s high ranking managers revealed startling misunderstandings of elementary concepts For instance NASA managers claimed that there was a 1 in 100 000 probability of a catastrophic failure aboard the Shuttle but Feynman discovered that NASA s own engineers estimated the probability of a catastrophe at closer to 1 in 200 He concluded that NASA management s estimate of the reliability of the Space Shuttle was unrealistic and he was particularly angered that NASA used it to recruit Christa McAuliffe into the Teacher in Space program He warned in his appendix to the commission s report which was included only after he threatened not to sign the report For a successful technology reality must take precedence over public relations for nature cannot be fooled 181 Recognition and awards edit The first public recognition of Feynman s work came in 1954 when Lewis Strauss the chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission AEC notified him that he had won the Albert Einstein Award which was worth 15 000 and came with a gold medal Because of Strauss s actions in stripping Oppenheimer of his security clearance Feynman was reluctant to accept the award but Isidor Isaac Rabi cautioned him You should never turn a man s generosity as a sword against him Any virtue that a man has even if he has many vices should not be used as a tool against him 182 It was followed by the AEC s Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award in 1962 183 Schwinger Tomonaga and Feynman shared the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics for their fundamental work in quantum electrodynamics with deep ploughing consequences for the physics of elementary particles 184 He was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 1965 2 185 received the Oersted Medal in 1972 186 and the National Medal of Science in 1979 187 He was elected a Member of the National Academy of Sciences but ultimately resigned 188 189 and is no longer listed by them 190 Death editIn 1978 Feynman sought medical treatment for abdominal pains and was diagnosed with liposarcoma a rare form of cancer Surgeons removed a very large tumor that had crushed one kidney and his spleen In 1986 doctors discovered another cancer Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia 191 Further operations were performed in October 1986 and October 1987 192 He was again hospitalized at the UCLA Medical Center on February 3 1988 A ruptured duodenal ulcer caused kidney failure and he declined to undergo the dialysis that might have prolonged his life for a few months Feynman s wife Gweneth sister Joan and cousin Frances Lewine watched over him during the final days of his life until he died on February 15 1988 193 When Feynman was nearing death he asked his friend and colleague Danny Hillis why Hillis appeared so sad Hillis replied that he thought Feynman was going to die soon Hillis quotes Feynman as replying Yeah he sighed that bugs me sometimes too But not so much as you think when you get as old as I am you start to realize that you ve told most of the good stuff you know to other people anyway 194 Near the end of his life Feynman attempted to visit the Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic ASSR in the Soviet Union a dream thwarted by Cold War bureaucratic issues The letter from the Soviet government authorizing the trip was not received until the day after he died His daughter Michelle later made the journey 195 Ralph Leighton chronicled the attempt in Tuva or Bust published in 1991 His burial was at Mountain View Cemetery and Mausoleum in Altadena California 196 His last words were I d hate to die twice It s so boring 195 Popular legacy editSee also List of things named after Richard Feynman nbsp Bust of Feynman on NTHU campus TaiwanAspects of Feynman s life have been portrayed in various media Feynman was portrayed by Matthew Broderick in the 1996 biopic Infinity 197 Actor Alan Alda commissioned playwright Peter Parnell to write a two character play about a fictional day in the life of Feynman set two years before Feynman s death The play QED premiered at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles in 2001 and was later presented at the Vivian Beaumont Theater on Broadway with both presentations starring Alda as Richard Feynman 198 Real Time Opera premiered its opera Feynman at the Norfolk Connecticut Chamber Music Festival in June 2005 199 In 2011 Feynman was the subject of a biographical graphic novel entitled simply Feynman written by Jim Ottaviani and illustrated by Leland Myrick 200 In 2013 Feynman s role on the Rogers Commission was dramatised by the BBC in The Challenger US title The Challenger Disaster with William Hurt playing Feynman 201 202 203 In 2016 Oscar Isaac performed a public reading of Feynman s 1946 love letter to the late Arline 204 In the 2023 American film Oppenheimer directed by Christopher Nolan and based on American Prometheus Feynman is portrayed by actor Jack Quaid 205 Feynman is commemorated in various ways On May 4 2005 the United States Postal Service issued the American Scientists commemorative set of four 37 cent self adhesive stamps in several configurations The scientists depicted were Richard Feynman John von Neumann Barbara McClintock and Josiah Willard Gibbs Feynman s stamp sepia toned features a photograph of Feynman in his thirties and eight small Feynman diagrams 206 The stamps were designed by Victor Stabin under the artistic direction of Carl T Herrman 207 208 209 210 211 The main building for the Computing Division at Fermilab is named the Feynman Computing Center in his honor 212 Two photographs of Feynman were used in Apple Computer s Think Different advertising campaign which launched in 1997 213 214 Sheldon Cooper a fictional theoretical physicist from the television series The Big Bang Theory is a Feynman fan who has emulated him on various occasions once by playing the bongo drums 215 On January 27 2016 co founder of Microsoft Bill Gates wrote an article describing Feynman s talents as a teacher The Best Teacher I Never Had which inspired Gates to create Project Tuva to place the videos of Feynman s Messenger Lectures The Character of Physical Law on a website for public viewing In 2015 Gates made a video in response to Caltech s request for thoughts on Feynman for the 50th anniversary of Feynman s 1965 Nobel Prize on why he thought Feynman was special 216 At CERN the European Organization for Nuclear Research home of the Large Hadron Collider a street on the Meyrin site is named Route Feynman Bibliography editSelected scientific works edit Feynman Richard P 1942 Laurie M Brown ed The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics PhD Dissertation Princeton University World Scientific with title Feynman s Thesis a New Approach to Quantum Theory published 2005 ISBN 978 981 256 380 4 Wheeler John A Feynman Richard P 1945 Interaction with the Absorber as the Mechanism of Radiation Reviews of Modern Physics 17 2 3 157 181 Bibcode 1945RvMP 17 157W doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 17 157 Archived from the original on April 17 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P 1946 A Theorem and its Application to Finite Tampers Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Atomic Energy Commission doi 10 2172 4341197 OSTI 4341197 Feynman Richard P Welton T A 1946 Neutron Diffusion in a Space Lattice of Fissionable and Absorbing Materials Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Atomic Energy Commission doi 10 2172 4381097 OSTI 4381097 Feynman Richard P Metropolis N Teller E 1947 Equations of State of Elements Based on the Generalized Fermi Thomas Theory PDF Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Atomic Energy Commission doi 10 2172 4417654 OSTI 4417654 Feynman Richard P 1948 Space time approach to non relativistic quantum mechanics Reviews of Modern Physics 20 2 367 387 Bibcode 1948RvMP 20 367F doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 20 367 Archived from the original on September 17 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P 1948 A Relativistic Cut Off for Classical Electrodynamics Physical Review 74 8 939 946 Bibcode 1948PhRv 74 939F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 74 939 Archived from the original on September 19 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P 1948 Relativistic Cut Off for Quantum Electrodynamics Physical Review 74 10 1430 1438 Bibcode 1948PhRv 74 1430F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 74 1430 Archived from the original on September 19 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Wheeler John A Feynman Richard P 1949 Classical Electrodynamics in Terms of Direct Interparticle Action PDF Reviews of Modern Physics 21 3 425 433 Bibcode 1949RvMP 21 425W doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 21 425 Feynman Richard P 1949 The theory of positrons Physical Review 76 6 749 759 Bibcode 1949PhRv 76 749F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 76 749 S2CID 120117564 Archived from the original on August 9 2022 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P 1949 Space Time Approach to Quantum Electrodynamic Physical Review 76 6 769 789 Bibcode 1949PhRv 76 769F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 76 769 Feynman Richard P 1950 Mathematical formulation of the quantum theory of electromagnetic interaction Physical Review 80 3 440 457 Bibcode 1950PhRv 80 440F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 80 440 Archived from the original on September 14 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P 1951 An Operator Calculus Having Applications in Quantum Electrodynamics Physical Review 84 1 108 128 Bibcode 1951PhRv 84 108F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 84 108 Archived from the original on September 15 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P 1953 The l Transition in Liquid Helium Physical Review 90 6 1116 1117 Bibcode 1953PhRv 90 1116F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 90 1116 2 Archived from the original on September 17 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P de Hoffmann F Serber R 1955 Dispersion of the Neutron Emission in U235 Fission Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Atomic Energy Commission doi 10 2172 4354998 OSTI 4354998 Feynman Richard P 1956 Science and the Open Channel Science published February 24 1956 123 3191 307 Bibcode 1956Sci 123 307F doi 10 1126 science 123 3191 307 PMID 17774518 Cohen M Feynman Richard P 1957 Theory of Inelastic Scattering of Cold Neutrons from Liquid Helium Physical Review 107 1 13 24 Bibcode 1957PhRv 107 13C doi 10 1103 PhysRev 107 13 Archived from the original on September 14 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Feynman Richard P Vernon F L Hellwarth R W 1957 Geometric representation of the Schrodinger equation for solving maser equations PDF Journal of Applied Physics 28 1 49 Bibcode 1957JAP 28 49F doi 10 1063 1 1722572 Feynman Richard P 1960 There s Plenty of Room at the Bottom Engineering and Science 23 5 22 36 Edgar R S Feynman Richard P Klein S Lielausis I Steinberg C M 1962 Mapping experiments with r mutants of bacteriophage T4D Genetics published February 1962 47 2 179 86 doi 10 1093 genetics 47 2 179 PMC 1210321 PMID 13889186 Feynman Richard P 1968 1966 What is Science PDF The Physics Teacher 7 6 313 320 Bibcode 1969PhTea 7 313F doi 10 1119 1 2351388 Retrieved June 10 2023 Lecture presented at the fifteenth annual meeting of the National Science Teachers Association 1966 in New York City Feynman Richard P 1966 The Development of the Space Time View of Quantum Electrodynamics Science published August 12 1966 153 3737 699 708 Bibcode 1966Sci 153 699F doi 10 1126 science 153 3737 699 PMID 17791121 Feynman Richard P 1974a Structure of the proton Science American Association for the Advancement of Science published February 15 1974 183 4125 601 610 Bibcode 1974Sci 183 601F doi 10 1126 science 183 4125 601 JSTOR 1737688 PMID 17778830 S2CID 9938227 Feynman Richard P 1974 Cargo Cult Science PDF Engineering and Science 37 7 Feynman Richard P Kleinert Hagen 1986 Effective classical partition functions PDF Physical Review A published December 1986 34 6 5080 5084 Bibcode 1986PhRvA 34 5080F doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 34 5080 PMID 9897894 Feynman Richard P 1986 Rogers Commission Report Volume 2 Appendix F Personal Observations on Reliability of Shuttle NASA Feynman Richard P 1988 Difficulties in Applying the Variational Principle to Quantum Field Theories in Polley L Pottinger D E L eds Variational Calculations in Quantum Field Theory World Scientific published August 1 1988 pp 28 40 doi 10 1142 9789814390187 0003 ISBN 9971 50 500 2 Proceedings of the International Workshop at Wangerooge Island Germany Sept 1 4 1987 Feynman Richard P 2000 Laurie M Brown ed Selected Papers of Richard Feynman With Commentary 20th Century Physics World Scientific ISBN 978 981 02 4131 5 Textbooks and lecture notes edit nbsp The Feynman Lectures on Physics including Feynman s Tips on Physics The Definitive and Extended Edition 2nd edition 2005 The Feynman Lectures on Physics is perhaps his most accessible work for anyone with an interest in physics compiled from lectures to Caltech undergraduates in 1961 1964 As news of the lectures lucidity grew professional physicists and graduate students began to drop in to listen Co authors Robert B Leighton and Matthew Sands colleagues of Feynman edited and illustrated them into book form The work has endured and is useful to this day They were edited and supplemented in 2005 with Feynman s Tips on Physics A Problem Solving Supplement to the Feynman Lectures on Physics by Michael Gottlieb and Ralph Leighton Robert Leighton s son with support from Kip Thorne and other physicists Feynman Richard P Leighton Robert B Sands Matthew 2005 1970 The Feynman Lectures on Physics The Definitive and Extended Edition 2nd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 0 8053 9045 6 Includes Feynman s Tips on Physics with Michael Gottlieb and Ralph Leighton which includes four previously unreleased lectures on problem solving exercises by Robert Leighton and Rochus Vogt and a historical essay by Matthew Sands Three volumes originally published as separate volumes in 1964 and 1966 Feynman Richard P 1961 Theory of Fundamental Processes Addison Wesley ISBN 0 8053 2507 7 Feynman Richard P 1962 Quantum Electrodynamics Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 8053 2501 0 Feynman Richard P Hibbs Albert 1965 Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 020650 3 Feynman Richard P 1967 The Character of Physical Law The 1964 Messenger Lectures MIT Press ISBN 0 262 56003 8 Feynman Richard P 1972 Statistical Mechanics A Set of Lectures Reading Mass W A Benjamin ISBN 0 8053 2509 3 Feynman Richard P 1985b QED The Strange Theory of Light and Matter Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 02417 0 Feynman Richard P 1987 Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics The 1986 Dirac Memorial Lectures Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34000 4 Feynman Richard P 1995 Brian Hatfield ed Lectures on Gravitation Addison Wesley Longman ISBN 0 201 62734 5 Feynman Richard P 1997 Feynman s Lost Lecture The Motion of Planets Around the Sun Vintage Press ed London England Vintage ISBN 0 09 973621 7 Feynman Richard P 2000 Hey Tony Allen Robin W eds Feynman Lectures on Computation Perseus Books Group ISBN 0 7382 0296 7 Computer science also differs from physics in that it is not actually a science It does not study natural objects Neither is it as you might think mathematics although it does use mathematical reasoning pretty extensively Rather computer science is like engineering it is all about getting something to do something rather than just dealing with abstractions Popular works edit Feynman Richard P 1985 Leighton Ralph ed Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman Adventures of a Curious Character W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 01921 7 OCLC 10925248 Feynman Richard P 1988a Leighton Ralph ed What Do You Care What Other People Think Further Adventures of a Curious Character W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 02659 0 No Ordinary Genius The Illustrated Richard Feynman ed Christopher Sykes W W Norton amp Company 1996 ISBN 0 393 31393 X Six Easy Pieces Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher Perseus Books 1994 ISBN 0 201 40955 0 Listed by the board of directors of the Modern Library as one of the 100 best nonfiction books 217 Six Not So Easy Pieces Einstein s Relativity Symmetry and Space Time Addison Wesley 1997 ISBN 0 201 15026 3 Feynman Richard P 1998 The Meaning of It All Thoughts of a Citizen Scientist Reading Massachusetts Perseus Publishing ISBN 0 7382 0166 9 Feynman Richard P 1999 Robbins Jeffrey ed The Pleasure of Finding Things Out The Best Short Works of Richard P Feynman Cambridge Massachusetts Perseus Books ISBN 0 7382 0108 1 Classic Feynman All the Adventures of a Curious Character edited by Ralph Leighton W W Norton amp Company 2005 ISBN 0 393 06132 9 Chronologically reordered omnibus volume of Surely You re Joking Mr Feynman and What Do You Care What Other People Think with a bundled CD containing one of Feynman s signature lectures Audio and video recordings edit Safecracker Suite a collection of drum pieces interspersed with Feynman telling anecdotes Los Alamos From Below audio talk given by Feynman at Santa Barbara on February 6 1975 The Feynman Lectures on Physics The Complete Audio Collection selections from which were also released as Six Easy Pieces and Six Not So Easy Pieces Samples of Feynman s drumming chanting and speech are included in the songs Tuva Groove Bolur Daa Bol Bolbas Daa Bol and Kargyraa Rap Durgen Chugaa on the album Back Tuva Future The Adventure Continues by Kongar ool Ondar The hidden track on this album also includes excerpts from lectures without musical background The Messenger Lectures given at Cornell in 1964 in which he explains basic topics in physics 218 adapted into the book The Character of Physical Law Take the world from another point of view videorecording with Richard Feynman Films for the Hu 1972 The Douglas Robb Memorial Lectures four public lectures of which the four chapters of the book QED The Strange Theory of Light and Matter are transcripts 1979 The Pleasure of Finding Things Out BBC Horizon episode 1981 not to be confused with the later published book of the same title Richard Feynman Fun to Imagine Collection BBC Archive of six short films of Feynman talking in a style that is accessible to all about the physics behind common to all experiences 1983 Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics 1986 Tiny Machines The Feynman Talk on Nanotechnology video 1984 Computers From the Inside Out video Quantum Mechanical View of Reality Workshop at Esalen video 1983 Idiosyncratic Thinking Workshop video 1985 Bits and Pieces From Richard s Life and Times video 1988 Strangeness Minus Three video BBC Horizon 1964 No Ordinary Genius video Cristopher Sykes Documentary Richard Feynman The Best Mind Since Einstein video Documentary The Motion of Planets Around the Sun audio sometimes titled Feynman s Lost Lecture Nature of Matter audio References edit Tindol Robert December 2 1999 Physics World poll names Richard Feynman one of 10 greatest physicists of all time Press release California Institute of Technology Retrieved June 10 2023 a b c Richard P Feynman Biographical The Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on July 1 2006 Retrieved April 23 2013 a b c d e O Connor J J Robertson E F August 2002 Richard Feynman 1918 1988 Biography MacTutor History of Mathematics University of St Andrews Retrieved June 10 2023 Oakes 2007 p 231 Chown 1985 p 34 Close 2011 p 58 a b Sykes 1994 p 54 Friedman 2004 p 231 Feynman 1985 p 18 Feynman 1985 p 20 Henderson 2011 p 8 Gleick 1992 pp 25 26 Seelye Katharine Q September 10 2020 Joan Feynman Who Shined Light on the Aurora Borealis Dies at 93 The New York Times Retrieved September 13 2020 Hirshberg Charles April 18 2002 My Mother the Scientist Popular Science Retrieved June 10 2023 Haynie D T 2007 And the award goes to International Journal of Nanomedicine 2 2 125 127 ISSN 1176 9114 PMC 2673976 PMID 17722541 Feynman 1988a p 25 Brian 2001 p 49 Interviewer Do you call yourself an agnostic or an atheist Feynman An atheist Agnostic for me would be trying to weasel out and sound a little nicer than I am about this Harrison John Physics bongos and the art of the nude The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on January 10 2022 Retrieved April 23 2013 Feynman 1985 pp 284 287 Schwach Howard April 15 2005 Museum Tracks Down FRHS Nobel Laureates The Wave Archived from the original on May 5 2019 Retrieved April 23 2013 Gleick 1992 p 30 Carroll 1996 p 9 The general experience of psychologists in applying tests would lead them to expect that Feynman would have made a much higher IQ if he had been properly tested Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 19 20 Gleick says his IQ was 125 No Ordinary Genius says 123 Schweber 1994 p 374 Richard Feynman Biographies Atomic Archive Retrieved June 10 2023 Feynman 1985 p 24 Gleick 1992 p 15 a b Mehra 1994 p 41 Feynman 1985 p 72 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 45 46 Feynman Richard March 5 1966 Richard Feynman Session II Interview Interviewed by Charles Weiner American Institute of Physics Archived from the original on May 5 2019 Retrieved May 25 2017 Vallarta M S Feynman Richard P March 1939 The Scattering of Cosmic Rays by the Stars of a Galaxy PDF Physical Review American Physical Society 55 5 506 507 Bibcode 1939PhRv 55 506V doi 10 1103 PhysRev 55 506 2 Archived PDF from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved December 13 2019 Gleick 1992 p 82 Feynman R P August 1939 Forces in Molecules Physical Review American Physical Society 56 4 340 343 Bibcode 1939PhRv 56 340F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 56 340 S2CID 121972425 Archived from the original on September 19 2020 Retrieved May 20 2019 Mehra 1994 pp 71 78 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 p 56 List of Previous Putnam Winners PDF Mathematical Association of America Retrieved June 10 2023 a b Gleick 1992 p 84 Feynman 1985 pp 77 80 Cosmology Math Plus Mach Equals Far Out Gravity Time June 26 1964 Archived from the original on December 13 2011 Retrieved August 7 2010 Hoyle F Narlikar J V 1964 A New Theory of Gravitation Proceedings of the Royal Society A 282 1389 191 207 Bibcode 1964RSPSA 282 191H doi 10 1098 rspa 1964 0227 S2CID 59402270 a b Gleick 1992 pp 129 130 Feynman Richard P 1942 The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics PDF PhD Princeton University Archived PDF from the original on December 20 2019 Retrieved July 12 2016 a b c Mehra 1994 pp 92 101 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 66 67 Gleick 1992 pp 150 151 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 63 64 Feynman 1985 pp 99 103 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 64 65 Feynman 1985 pp 107 108 Richard Feynman Lecture Los Alamos From Below Archived May 5 2020 at the Wayback Machine talk given at UCSB in 1975 posted to YouTube on July 12 2016 Quote I did not even have my degree when I started to work on stuff associated with the Manhattan Project Later in this same talk at 5m34s Archived March 4 2022 at the Wayback Machine he explains that he took a six week vacation to finish his thesis so received his PhD prior to his arrival at Los Alamos Gleick 1992 pp 141 145 Hoddeson et al 1993 p 59 Gleick 1992 pp 158 160 Gleick 1992 pp 165 169 a b Hoddeson et al 1993 pp 157 159 Hoddeson et al 1993 p 183 Bashe et al 1986 p 14 Hillis 1989 p 78 Feynman 1985 pp 125 129 Gleick 1992 p 181 Galison 1998 pp 403 407 Galison 1998 pp 407 409 Wellerstein Alex June 6 2014 Feynman and the Bomb Restricted Data Retrieved June 10 2023 Feynman 1985 p 122 Galison 1998 pp 414 422 Gleick 1992 p 257 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 95 96 Gleick 1992 pp 188 189 Feynman 1985 pp 147 149 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 p 99 a b Gleick 1992 p 184 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 p 96 Gleick 1992 pp 296 297 Morisy Michael Hovden Robert June 6 2012 J Pat Brown ed The Feynman Files The professor s invitation past the Iron Curtain MuckRock Archived from the original on May 5 2019 Retrieved July 13 2016 SAC Special Agent in Charge Washington Field Office January 26 1955 FOI Request FBI files on Richard Feynman Requested by Michael Morisy on March 12 2012 for the Federal Bureau of Investigation of United States of America and fulfilled on March 21 2012 p 1 324 Retrieved June 10 2023 In a report by SA at Albuquerque New Mexico dated 3 14 50 captioned R there is set forth the fact that RICHARD PHILLIPS F EYNMAN was employed at Los Alamos New Mexico on the atomic bomb project in the Theoretical Physics Division from April 1 1943 to October 27 1945 This individual according to this report was granted Atomic Energy Commission security clearance rating of Q clearance on 5 25 49 Gleick 1992 pp 200 202 Feynman 1985 p 134 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 p 101 March Robert H 2003 Physics at the University of Wisconsin A History Physics in Perspective 5 2 130 149 Bibcode 2003PhP 5 130M doi 10 1007 s00016 003 0142 6 S2CID 120730710 a b Mehra 1994 pp 161 164 178 179 Hoddeson et al 1993 pp 47 52 Hoddeson et al 1993 p 316 Gleick 1992 p 205 Gleick 1992 p 225 Feynman 1985 pp 162 163 a b c Mehra 1994 pp 171 174 I love my wife My wife is dead Letters of Note February 15 2012 Retrieved April 23 2013 Gleick 1992 pp 227 229 Mehra 1994 pp 213 214 Gleick 1992 p 232 Mehra 1994 p 217 Mehra 1994 pp 218 219 Mehra 1994 pp 223 228 Mehra 1994 pp 229 234 Feynman Richard P December 11 1965 Richard P Feynman Nobel Lecture The Development of the Space Time View of Quantum Electrodynamics Nobel Foundation Retrieved June 10 2023 Mehra 1994 pp 246 248 Gleick 1992 pp 256 258 Gleick 1992 pp 267 269 Dyson F J 1949 The radiation theories of Tomonaga Schwinger and Feynman Physical Review 75 3 486 502 Bibcode 1949PhRv 75 486D doi 10 1103 PhysRev 75 486 Gleick 1992 pp 271 272 Mehra 1994 pp 251 252 Mehra 1994 pp 271 272 Mehra 1994 pp 301 302 Gleick 1992 pp 275 276 Aoyama Tatsumi Kinoshita Toichiro Nio Makiko February 8 2018 Revised and improved value of the QED tenth order electron anomalous magnetic moment Physical Review D 97 3 036001 arXiv 1712 06060 Bibcode 2018PhRvD 97c6001A doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 97 036001 ISSN 2470 0010 S2CID 118922814 Kac Mark 1949 On Distributions of Certain Wiener Functionals Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 65 1 1 13 doi 10 2307 1990512 JSTOR 1990512 Gleick 1992 p 276 a b c Gleick 1992 p 277 Gleick 1992 p 287 Feynman 1985 pp 232 233 Feynman Richard March 5 1966 Richard Feynman Session III Interview Interviewed by Charles Weiner American Institute of Physics Archived from the original on August 9 2016 Retrieved June 19 2016 a b Feynman 1985 p 191 Mehra 1994 p 333 a b Gleick 1992 p 278 Gleick 1992 p 296 Peat 1997 p 98 Peat 1997 p 120 Mehra 1994 p 331 Gleick 1992 pp 283 286 Beck John H 2013 Encyclopedia of Percussion Taylor amp Francis p 155 ISBN 9781317747680 Archived from the original on March 4 2022 Retrieved August 1 2020 Feynman 1985 pp 322 327 Calisphere Richard Feynman playing the conga drum Calisphere December 1956 Archived from the original on May 13 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 Peat 1997 pp 125 127 Feynman 1985 pp 233 236 Gleick 1992 pp 291 294 a b Wellerstein Alex July 11 2014 Who smeared Richard Feynman Restricted Data Retrieved June 10 2023 Krauss 2011 p 168 Gleick 1992 pp 339 347 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 151 153 A Weekend at Richard Feynman s House It s Just A Life Story November 19 2008 Archived from the original on October 7 2016 Retrieved July 15 2016 Gleick 1992 pp 405 406 Feynman 1985 pp 330 337 Feynman 1985 pp 204 205 Colourful language U of T psychologists discover enhanced language learning in synesthetes University of Toronto News Retrieved March 20 2023 a b Gleick 1992 pp 409 412 Lipman Julia C March 5 1999 Finding the Real Feynman The Tech Archived from the original on October 10 2019 Retrieved October 9 2019 Feynman 1988a p 74 a b Gleick 1992 pp 299 303 Pines David 1989 Richard Feynman and Condensed Matter Physics Physics Today 42 2 61 Bibcode 1989PhT 42b 61P doi 10 1063 1 881194 Gleick 1992 pp 330 339 a b Gleick 1992 pp 387 396 Mehra 1994 pp 507 514 Mehra 1994 pp 516 519 Mehra 1994 pp 505 507 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 p 189 Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 p 170 Nielsen Michael A Chuang Isaac L 2010 Quantum Computation and Quantum Information 10th anniversary ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 7 ISBN 978 1 107 00217 3 OCLC 844974180 Rieffel Eleanor G Polak Wolfgang H March 4 2011 Quantum Computing A Gentle Introduction MIT Press p 44 ISBN 978 0 262 01506 6 Deutsch 1992 pp 57 61 Hillis 1989 pp 78 83 Feynman Richard 1982 Simulating Physics with Computers International Journal of Theoretical Physics 21 6 7 467 488 Bibcode 1982IJTP 21 467F CiteSeerX 10 1 1 45 9310 doi 10 1007 BF02650179 S2CID 124545445 Kleinert Hagen 1999 Specific heat of liquid helium in zero gravity very near the lambda point Physical Review D 60 8 085001 arXiv hep th 9812197 Bibcode 1999PhRvD 60h5001K doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 60 085001 S2CID 117436273 Lipa J A Nissen J Stricker D Swanson D Chui T 2003 Specific heat of liquid helium in zero gravity very near the lambda point Physical Review B 68 17 174518 arXiv cond mat 0310163 Bibcode 2003PhRvB 68q4518L doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 68 174518 S2CID 55646571 Way Michael 2017 What I cannot create I do not understand Journal of Cell Science 130 18 2941 2942 doi 10 1242 jcs 209791 ISSN 1477 9137 PMID 28916552 S2CID 36379246 Martin Ebers Susana Navas eds 2020 Algorithms and Law Cambridge University Press pp 5 6 ISBN 9781108424820 Sands Matthew April 1 2005 Capturing the Wisdom of Feynman Physics Today 58 4 49 55 Bibcode 2005PhT 58d 49S doi 10 1063 1 1955479 ISSN 0031 9228 Feynman 1985 pp 318 Gleick 1992 pp 357 364 Gleick 1992 pp 12 13 Feynman 1985 pp 241 246 Mehra 1994 pp 336 341 Bethe 1991 p 241 Feynman 1985 pp 288 302 Feynman Richard P March 1965 New Textbooks for the New Mathematics PDF Engineering and Science California Institute of Technology 28 6 9 15 ISSN 0013 7812 Retrieved June 10 2023 Feynman 1999 pp 184 185 Feynman Richard P June 1974 Cargo Cult Science PDF Engineering and Science California Institute of Technology 37 7 10 13 ISSN 0013 7812 Retrieved June 10 2023 Van Kortryk T May 2017 The doctoral students of Richard Feynman Physics Today arXiv 1801 04574 doi 10 1063 PT 5 9100 S2CID 119088526 Interview with Jenijoy La Belle PDF Caltech Retrieved June 10 2023 Gleick 1992 pp 409 411 Gleick 1992 p 411 Johnson George July 2000 The Jaguar and the Fox The Atlantic Retrieved June 10 2023 Murray Gell Mann talks about Richard Feynman in January 12 2012 on YouTube Feynman 1985 pp 184 191 Gleick 1992 pp 287 291 341 345 Multiple sources Hu Jane C September 19 2018 Replacing names in science after MeToo Quartzy Retrieved June 10 2023 Urry Meg August 9 2014 Sexual harassment in science needs to stop Opinion CNN Retrieved June 10 2023 Koren Marina October 24 2018 Lawrence Krauss and the Legacy of Harassment in Science The theoretical physicist isn t the first celebrity scientist to be accused of sexual misconduct but he is the first to face consequences The Atlantic Archived from the original on May 30 2021 Retrieved September 26 2019 Feynman Richard P 1988b An Outsider s Inside View of the Challenger Inquiry PDF Physics Today 41 1 26 37 Bibcode 1988PhT 41b 26F doi 10 1063 1 881143 Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2021 Retrieved April 26 2021 Gweneth explained how she thought I would make a unique contribution in a way that I am modest enough not to describe Nevertheless I believed what she said So I said OK I ll accept Gleick 1992 p 423 Feynman 1988a p 151 Gleick James February 17 1988 Richard Feynman Dead at 69 Leading Theoretical Physicist The New York Times Retrieved June 10 2023 Feynman Richard P Appendix F Personal observations on the reliability of the Shuttle Kennedy Space Center Archived from the original on May 5 2019 Retrieved September 11 2017 Gleick 1992 pp 295 296 LAWRENCE Richard P Feynman 196 United States Department of Energy December 28 2010 Retrieved June 10 2023 The Nobel Prize in Physics 1965 The Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on April 7 2018 Retrieved July 15 2016 Mehra J 2002 Richard Phillips Feynman 11 May 1918 15 February 1988 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 48 97 128 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2002 0007 S2CID 62221940 The Oersted Medal American Association of Physics Teachers Retrieved June 10 2023 The President s National Medal of Science Recipient Details National Science Foundation Archived from the original on May 5 2019 Retrieved July 15 2016 Toumey Chris 2005 SPT v8n3 Reviews Feynman Unprocessed Techne Research in Philosophy and Technology Virginia Tech 8 3 doi 10 5840 techne20058314 Archived from the original on March 19 2019 Feynman Richard Feynman Michelle 2005 Perfectly reasonable deviations from the beaten track the letters of Richard P Feynman New York Basic Books ISBN 0738206369 OCLC 57393623 Feynman 1999 p 13 John Simmons Lynda Simmons The Scientific 100 p 250 Mehra 1994 pp 600 605 Gleick 1992 p 437 Hillis W Daniel 1989 Richard Feynman and The Connection Machine Physics Today American Institute of Physics 42 2 78 83 Bibcode 1989PhT 42b 78H doi 10 1063 1 881196 ISSN 0031 9228 via The Long Now Hillis on his conversation with Feynman about his dying a b Gribbin amp Gribbin 1997 pp 257 258 Rasmussen Cecilia June 5 2005 History Exhumed Via Computer Chip Los Angeles 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Modern Library Archived from the original on August 25 2012 Retrieved November 12 2016 Feynman s Messenger Lectures feynmanlectures caltech edu 2021 Retrieved July 23 2022 Sources editBashe Charles J Johnson Lyle R Palmer John H Pugh Emerson W 1986 IBM s Early Computers Cambridge Massachusetts MIT ISBN 0 262 02225 7 OCLC 12021988 Bethe Hans A 1991 The Road from Los Alamos Masters of Modern Physics Vol 2 New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 671 74012 1 OCLC 24734608 Brian Denis 2001 The Voice of Genius Conversations with Nobel Scientists and Other Luminaries Cambridge Massachusetts Perseus ISBN 978 0 7382 0447 5 OCLC 751292707 Carroll John Bissell 1996 Sternberg Robert J Ben Zeev Talia eds The Nature of Mathematical Thinking Mahwah New Jersey L Erlbaum Associates ISBN 978 0 8058 1799 7 OCLC 34513302 Chown Marcus May 2 1985 Strangeness and Charm New Scientist 34 ISSN 0262 4079 Close Frank 2011 The Infinity Puzzle The Personalities Politics and Extraordinary Science Behind the Higgs Boson Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 959350 7 OCLC 840427493 Deutsch David June 1 1992 Quantum computation Physics World 5 6 57 61 doi 10 1088 2058 7058 5 6 38 ISSN 0953 8585 Friedman Jerome 2004 A Student s View of Fermi In Cronin James W ed Fermi Remembered Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 12111 6 OCLC 835230762 Galison Peter 1998 Feynman s War Modelling Weapons Modelling Nature Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 29 3 391 434 Bibcode 1998SHPMP 29 391G doi 10 1016 S1355 2198 98 00013 6 Gleick James 1992 Genius The Life and Science of Richard Feynman Pantheon Books ISBN 0 679 40836 3 OCLC 243743850 Gribbin John Gribbin Mary 1997 Richard Feynman A Life in Science Dutton ISBN 0 525 94124 X OCLC 636838499 Henderson Harry 2011 Richard Feynman Quarks Bombs and Bongos Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 0 8160 6176 1 OCLC 751114185 Hoddeson Lillian Henriksen Paul W Meade Roger A Westfall Catherine L 1993 Critical Assembly A Technical History of Los Alamos During the Oppenheimer Years 1943 1945 New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 44132 3 OCLC 26764320 Krauss Lawrence M 2011 Quantum Man Richard Feynman s Life in Science W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 06471 1 OCLC 601108916 Mehra Jagdish 1994 The Beat of a Different Drum The Life and Science of Richard Feynman New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 853948 7 OCLC 28507544 Oakes Elizabeth H 2007 Encyclopedia of World Scientists Revised edition New York Facts on File ISBN 978 1 4381 1882 6 OCLC 466364697 Peat David 1997 Infinite Potential the Life and Times of David Bohm Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 40635 7 OCLC 1014736570 Schweber Silvan S 1994 QED and the Men Who Made It Dyson Feynman Schwinger and Tomonaga Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03327 7 OCLC 918243948 Sykes Christopher 1994 No Ordinary Genius the Illustrated Richard Feynman New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 03621 9 OCLC 924553844 Further reading editArticles edit Physics Today American Institute of Physics magazine February 1989 Issue Vol 42 No 2 Special Feynman memorial issue containing non technical articles on Feynman s life and work in physics Feynman Richard P 1987 Leighton Ralph ed Mr Feynman Goes to Washington Engineering and Science Caltech 51 1 6 22 ISSN 0013 7812 Books edit Brown Laurie M and Rigden John S editors 1993 Most of the Good Stuff Memories of Richard Feynman Simon amp Schuster New York ISBN 0 88318 870 8 Commentary by Joan Feynman John Wheeler Hans Bethe Julian Schwinger Murray Gell Mann Daniel Hillis David Goodstein Freeman Dyson and Laurie Brown Dyson Freeman 1979 Disturbing the Universe Harper and Row ISBN 0 06 011108 9 Dyson s autobiography The chapters A Scientific Apprenticeship and A Ride to Albuquerque describe his impressions of Feynman in the period 1947 1948 when Dyson was a graduate student at Cornell Leighton Ralph 2000 Tuva or Bust Richard Feynman s last journey W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 32069 3 LeVine Harry 2009 The Great Explainer The Story of Richard Feynman Greensboro North Carolina Morgan Reynolds ISBN 978 1 59935 113 1 for high school readers Milburn Gerald J 1998 The Feynman Processor Quantum Entanglement and the Computing Revolution Reading Massachusetts Perseus Books ISBN 0 7382 0173 1 Mlodinow Leonard 2003 Feynman s Rainbow A Search For Beauty In Physics And In Life New York Warner Books ISBN 0 446 69251 4 Published in the United Kingdom as Some Time With Feynman Ottaviani Jim Myrick Leland 2011 Feynman The Graphic Novel New York First Second ISBN 978 1 59643 259 8 OCLC 664838951 Films and plays edit Infinity 1996 a movie both directed by and starring Matthew Broderick as Feynman depicting his love affair with his first wife and ending with the Trinity test Parnell Peter 2002 QED Applause Books ISBN 978 1 55783 592 5 play Whittell Crispin 2006 Clever Dick Oberon Books play The Quest for Tannu Tuva with Richard Feynman and Ralph Leighton 1987 BBC Horizon and PBS Nova entitled Last Journey of a Genius No Ordinary Genius a two part documentary about Feynman s life and work with contributions from colleagues friends and family 1993 BBC Horizon and PBS Nova a one hour version under the title The Best Mind Since Einstein 2 50 minute films The Challenger 2013 a BBC Two factual drama starring William Hurt tells the story of American Nobel prize winning physicist Richard Feynman s determination to reveal the truth behind the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster The Fantastic Mr Feynman One hour documentary 2013 BBC TV How We Built The Bomb a docudrama about The Manhattan Project at Los Alamos Feynman is played by actor playwright Michael Raver 2015External links editRichard Feynman at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata External videos nbsp Presentation by Michelle Feynman on Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track May 9 2005 C SPANOfficial website The Feynman Lectures on Physics Website by Michael Gottlieb assisted by Rudolf Pfeiffer and Caltech Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 4 March 1966 American Institute of Physics Niels Bohr Library amp Archives Session I Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 5 March 1966 American Institute of Physics Niels Bohr Library amp Archives Session II Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 27 June 1966 American Institute of Physics Niels Bohr Library amp Archives Session III Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 28 June 1966 American Institute of Physics Niels Bohr Library amp Archives Session IV Oral history interview transcript with Richard Feynman on 4 February 1973 American Institute of Physics Niels Bohr Library amp Archives Session V Additional Richard Feynman interviews with and about American Institute of Physics Feynman Online a site dedicated to Feynman Portals nbsp Nuclear technology nbsp Physics nbsp History of science nbsp United States nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Feynman amp oldid 1206486197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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