M. Hildred Blewett
Born
Myrtle Hildred Hunt

(1911-05-28)28 May 1911
Died13 June 2004(2004-06-13) (aged 93)
NationalityCanadian
Education
SpouseJohn P. Blewett
Scientific career
FieldsAccelerator physics
Institutions
Doctoral advisorHans Bethe

Myrtle Hildred Blewett (born Myrtle Hildred Hunt; 28 May 1911 – 13 June 2004) was a Canadian accelerator physicist.[1]

Early life and education

Blewett was born on 28 May 1911 in Toronto, Ontario.[2] She graduated from the University of Toronto in 1935 with a BA in physics and mathematics. In 1938, Blewett joined Cornell University as a graduate student, with Hans Bethe as her thesis supervisor. However, due to the United States entrance to the second world war, her thesis work remained incomplete.[3]

Career

Blewett started her career at General Electric, where she devised a technique for controlling smoke pollution from factory chimneys in the 1940s.[1] She and her husband John Blewett were part of the initial team at Brookhaven National Laboratory.[4] She then worked at Argonne National Laboratory before joining CERN in 1969.[3]

Following her retirement from CERN in 1977, Blewett retired to Vancouver. She died on 13 June 2004, and was commemorated by CERN colleagues Maria Fidecaro and Christine Sutton. She left much of her estate to the American Physical Society, founding the Blewett Scholarship for women physicists who return to the field after a break in their careers.[1]

Personal life

Blewett married John Blewett in 1936, who was also an accelerator physicist, and later divorced in 1960s.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "M. Hildred Blewett". American Physical Society. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  2. Wang, Jessica (1999). American science in an age of anxiety : scientists, anticommunism, and the cold war. Chapel Hill (N.C.): University of North Carolina press. pp. 94–99. ISBN 9780807847497.
  3. 1 2 Fidecaro, Maria; Sutton, Christine (July 2011). "Hildred Blewett: a life with particle accelerators". CERN Courier. 51 (6): 35–37.
  4. Jayakumar, Raghavan (2012). Particle accelerators, colliders, and the story of high energy physics charming the cosmic snake. Berlin: Springer. p. 99. ISBN 9783642220647.

Further reading

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