Ali Javan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ali Javan
Born December 26, 1926
Tehran, Iran
Nationality Iranian
American
Field Physicist
Institution Columbia
Bell Labs
MIT
Alma mater University of Tehran
Columbia
Academic advisor Charles Townes
Known for Inventing the gas laser
Notable prizes Albert Einstein World Award of Science (1993)

Ali Javan (Persian: علی جوان , born December 26, 1926 in Tehran, Iran) is an Iranian inventor and physicist at MIT. He co-invented the gas laser in 1960, with William R. Bennett.[1]

Contents

[edit] Academic life

He gradutated from Alborz High School, started his university studies at University of Tehran and continued at Columbia University after coming to the United States in 1948. He received his Ph.D. in physics in 1954. He joined Massachusetts Institute of Technology as an associate professor of physics in 1961 and has been a professor since 1964.

[edit] Honours

In 1975, Professor Ali Javan received from the Optical Society of America their most prestigious honor, the Fredric Ives Medal, with a citation that praised him for "producing an optical device (the Gas Laser) of unparalleled applicability to scientific research." In 1993, he received the Albert Einstein World Award of Science.

On May 6, 2006, Professor Ali Javan was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, along with another MIT Professor, Robert Langer.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Taylor, Nick (2000). LASER: The inventor, the Nobel laureate, and the thirty-year patent war. New York: Simon & Schuster, p. 125–128. ISBN 0-684-83515-0. 

[edit] External links

In other languages