Gerald J. Wasserburg

Gerald J. Wasserburg (born March 25, 1927, in New Brunswick, New Jersey) is an American geologist. He is the John D. MacArthur Professor of Geology and Geophysics, Emeritus, at the California Institute of Technology. He is known for his work in the fields of isotope geochemistry, cosmochemistry, meteoritics and astrophysics.

After leaving the US army he received the Combat Infantrymans badge, he graduated high school and attended college on the GI bill. Wasserburg completed his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1954, with a thesis on the development of Ar40-K40 dating, done under the sponsorship of Prof. H. C. Urey and Prof M. G. Inghram. He joined the faculty at Caltech in 1955 as Assistant Professor. He became Associate Professor in 1959 and Professor of Geology and Geophysics in 1962. In 1982 he became the John D. MacArthur Professor of Geology and Geophysics; he retired in 2001. He, Typhoon Lee and D.A. Papanastassiou discovered the presence of short lived radioactive 26Al in the early solar system and short 107Pd with R. Kelly.

Wasserburg was deeply involved in the Apollo Program with the returned Lunar samples. He was the co-inventor of the Lunatic Spectrometer (the first fully digital, mass spectrometer with computer controlled magnetic field scanning & rapid switching) and founder of the “Lunatic Asylum” research laboratory at Caltech specializing in high precision, high sensitivity isotopic analyses of meteorites, lunar and terrestrial samples. He & his co-workers were major contributors to establishing a chronology for the Moon and proposed the hypothesis of the late heavy bombardment (LHB) of the whole inner solar system at near 4.0 Gy ago (with F. Tera, D. A. Papanastassiou) .

Wasserburg's research led to a better understanding of the origins and history of the solar system and its component bodies and the precursor stellar sources contributing to the solar system; this research established a time scale for the development of the early solar system, including the processes of nucleosynthesis and the formation and evolution of the planets, the Moon and the meteorites. More recently he is investigating models of the chemical evolution of the Galaxy.

He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Science, the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Science & the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.[1] He won the Arthur L. Day Medal in 1970, the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal in 1973 and 1978 the Wollaston Medal in 1985, the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1991 and the Bowie medal in 2008. He was co-winner, with Claude Allègre, of the Crafoord Prize in Geosciences in 1986. He is the recipient of several honorary degrees.

References

Isotopic Adventures (autobiography) Annu.Rev. Earth Planet Sci.2003,v31,1-74 http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev.earth.31.100901.141409