Leon N. Cooper (né Kupchik; February 28, 1930 – October 23, 2024) was an American theoretical physicist and neuroscientist who shared the 1972 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on superconductivity. Cooper developed the concept of Cooper pairs and collaborated with John Bardeen and John Robert Schrieffer to develop the BCS theory of conventional superconductivity. In neuroscience, Cooper co-developed the BCM theory of synaptic plasticity.

Early life and education

Leon N. Kupchick was born on February 28, 1930 in The Bronx, New York City. His father, Irving Kupchik, was from Belarus and moved to the United States after the Russian Revolution in 1917. His mother, Anna Zola, was from Poland; she died when Leon was seven. His father changed the family's surname from Kupchick to Cooper when he remarried.

Leon attended the Bronx High School of Science, graduating in 1947.

He then studied at Columbia University, receiving a B.A. in 1951. He remained at Columbia for graduate school, obtaining an M.A. in 1953 and a Ph.D. in 1954. His doctoral thesis, written under Robert Serber, was on the subject of muonic atoms and the charge radius.

Career

Cooper spent one year as a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. New Jersey. He then taught at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign and Ohio State University before joining Brown University in 1958. Nestor partnered with Intel to develop the Ni1000 neural network computer chip in 1994.

Research

Superconductivity

thumb|right|Plaque at the University of Illinois, commemorating the development of the [[BCS theory of superconductivity]]

While Cooper was a postdoc at Princeton, he was approached by John Bardeen, a professor at the University of Illinois, and Bardeen's graduate student John Robert Schrieffer. Bardeen and Schrieffer were working on superconductivity, a topic which was new to Cooper, but he agreed to collaborate with them. Superconductivity had been experimentally discovered in 1911, but there was no theoretical explanation for the phenomenon. Cooper moved to Illinois as a postdoc to work with Bardeen.

After a year of theoretical investigation, Cooper developed the idea of a quasiparticle composed of two bound electrons, now known as a Cooper pair. Cooper published his concept of Cooper pairs in Physical Review in September 1956. The movement of Cooper pairs through a low-temperature metal would be almost unimpeded, producing a very low electrical resistance. After further development, Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer showed how this could produce superconductivity, publishing their theory in Physical Reviews in two papers during 1957. This theory became known as the BCS theory, after the authors' initials, and is widely accepted as the explanation for conventional superconductivity. Bardeen, Schrieffer and Cooper were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1972 for their theory. He died at his home in Providence, Rhode Island, on October 23, 2024, at the age of 94.

|-

| 1972

| Swedish Academy of Sciences

| Nobel Prize in Physics

| "For their jointly developed theory of superconductivity, usually called the BCS-theory."

| "

|-

| 1985

| Columbia University

| John Jay Award

| align=center | —

|

|}

Memberships

{| class="wikitable"

! Year

! Organization

! Type

!

|-

| 1973

| American Philosophical Society

| Member

|

|-

| 1974

| American Academy of Arts and Sciences

| Member

|

|-

| 1975

| National Academy of Sciences

| Member

|

|}

Honorary degrees

{| class="wikitable"

! Year

! University

! Degree

!

|-

| 1973

| University of Sussex

| Doctor of Science

|

|-

| 1974

| Brown University

| Doctor of Science

|

|-

| 1976

| Ohio State University

| Doctor of Science

|

|}

Publications

Cooper was the author of Science and Human Experience – a collection of essays, including previously unpublished material, on issues such as consciousness and the structure of space.

(Cambridge University Press, 2014).

Cooper also wrote an unconventional liberal-arts physics textbook, originally An Introduction to the Meaning and Structure of Physics (Harper and Row, 1968) and still in print in a somewhat condensed form as Physics: Structure and Meaning (Lebanon: New Hampshire, University Press of New England, 1992).

  • Cooper, L. N. & J. Rainwater. "Theory of Multiple Coulomb Scattering from Extended Nuclei", Nevis Cyclotron Laboratories at Columbia University, Office of Naval Research (ONR), United States Department of Energy (through predecessor agency the Atomic Energy Commission), (August 1954).
  • Cooper, L. N., Lee, H. J., Schwartz, B. B. & W. Silvert. "Theory of the Knight Shift and Flux Quantization in Superconductors", Brown University, United States Department of Energy (through predecessor agency the Atomic Energy Commission), (May 1962).
  • Cooper, L. N. & Feldman, D. "BCS: 50 years", World Scientific Publishing Co., (November 2010).

See also

  • List of Jewish Nobel laureates

Notes

References

  • including the Nobel Lecture, December 11, 1972 Microscopic Quantum Interference Effects in the Theory of Superconductivity
  • Brown University researcher profile
  • Brown University Physics Department profile
  • Critical Review evaluations of Professor Cooper