Albert Baez

Albert Baez
Born Albert Vinicio Baez
(1912-11-15)November 15, 1912
Puebla, Puebla, Mexico
Died March 20, 2007(2007-03-20) (aged 94)
San Mateo County, California, U.S.
Nationality United States
Fields Physics
Education Drew University (B.S., 1933)
Syracuse University (M.S., 1935)
Stanford University (Ph.D., 1950)
Doctoral advisor Paul Kirkpatrick
Known for X-ray microscopy
Physics education
Pacifist
Notable awards Dennis Gabor Award (1991)
Spouse Joan Chandos Bridge
Children 3; including Joan Baez and Mimi Fariña

Albert Vinicio Báez (/ˈb.ɛz/; November 15, 1912 March 20, 2007) was a prominent Mexican-American physicist, and the father of singers Joan Baez and Mimi Fariña. He was born in Puebla, Mexico, and his family moved to the United States when he was two years old because his father was a Methodist minister. Baez grew up in Brooklyn and considered becoming a minister before turning to mathematics and physics. He made important contributions to the early development of X-ray microscopes and later X-ray telescopes.[1][2]

Early life

Baez's father was a Methodist minister who had left Catholicism when his son was two. During his youth, Baez contemplated the ministry.

Baez earned degrees in mathematics from Drew University (BS, 1933) and Syracuse University (MS, 1935).[3] He married Joan Chandos Bridge, the daughter of an Episcopalian priest, in 1936. The couple became Quakers. The two had three daughters (Pauline, Joan and Mimi), then moved to California: Baez enrolled at Stanford's doctoral program in physics. In 1948, Baez co-invented, with his doctoral program advisor, Paul Kirkpatrick, the X-ray reflection microscope for examination of living cells. This microscope is still used in medicine. Baez received his Ph.D. in physics from Stanford in 1950. After his graduation, Baez developed concentric circles of alternating opaque and transparent materials to use diffraction instead of refraction to focus X-rays. These "zone plates" proved useful and even essential decades later only with the development of sufficiently bright, high intensity, synchrotron X-ray sources.[4]

Academic life

As the Cold War intensified in the 1950s, Baez's talent was in high demand in the burgeoning arms race, yet his family's pacifism moved him to refuse lucrative defense industry positions, and he devoted himself instead to education and humanitarianism.[5]

From 1950 to 1956, he held a professorship at the University of Redlands, where he continued his X-ray research. Baez took leave for a year to work with UNESCO in 1951, and stationed his family in Baghdad to establish the physics department and laboratory at Baghdad University. In 1959, Baez accepted a faculty position at MIT, and moved his family to the Boston area. In 1960, working with the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, he developed optics for an X-ray telescope. Later that year he moved his family to Claremont, California, where he joined the faculty at Harvey Mudd College. From 1961 to 1967, he directed science teaching for UNESCO in Paris.

Baez was the author of the textbook The New College Physics: A Spiral Approach (1967). He was the co-author of the textbook The Environment and Science and Technology Education (1987), and the memoir, A Year in Baghdad (1988), written with his wife Joan. Dr. Baez made nearly a hundred films on physics from 1967 to 1974 for the Encyclopædia Britannica Educational Corp. Baez chaired the Commission on Education of the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources from 1979 to 1983.

On 22 June 1974, the British Open University awarded Baez an honorary degree as Doctor of the University.[6]

Retirement

After his retirement, Baez occasionally delivered physics lectures and was president of Vivamos Mejor/USA, an organization founded in 1988 to help impoverished villages in Mexico. Its projects include preschool education, environmental projects, and community and educational activities. In 1991, the International Society for Optical Engineering awarded him and Kirkpatrick the Dennis Gabor Award for pioneering contributions to the development of X-ray imaging microscopes and X-ray imaging telescopes. In 1995, the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Awards Corporation (HENAAC) established the Albert V. Baez Award for Technical Excellence and Service to Humanity. Baez himself was inducted into the HENAAC Hall of Fame in 1998.

Baez was the father of folk singers Joan Baez and Mimi Fariña, and Pauline Bryan; he also was the uncle of mathematical physicist John Baez. He had three grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. He died of natural causes March 20, 2007 at age 94 in the Redwood City care home where he had lived for the prior three years. Baez had been divorced from his wife, Joan Bridge Baez, for several years, at the time of his death. (According to the singer Joan Baez, speaking at the 2009 Newport Folk Festival, her parents married each other a second time before his death.[7] His obituary in the New York Times states that "his survivors include his wife, Joan Bridge Baez of Woodside, Calif." [8])

References

  1. días estranhos
  2. Liberatore, Paul (March 20, 2007). "Noted scientist was father of Joan Baez and Mimi Farina". Marin Independent Journal.
  3. Mellada, Carmelaork=The Hispanic Engineer (Spring 1991). "Professional Profile: Albert Baez": 23.
  4. Levy, Dawn (May 16, 2007). "Memorial service set May 24 for physicist, X-ray optics pioneer Albert Baez". Stanford University News Service.
  5. http://www.notable biographies.com/supp/Supplement-Ca-Fi/Farina-Mimi.html#ixzz3QEENOV4V
  6. "Honorary Degrees Awarded" (PDF). The Open University. p. 1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
  7. http://www.npr.org/templates/player/mediaPlayer.html?action=1&t=1&islist=false&id=111395125&m=111501603 -- see the intro to Forever Young, which she says she sang at her parents' second marriage ceremony.
  8. "Albert Baez, 94, Scientist and Singers’ Father, Dies". The New York Times. March 27, 2007.

Further reading

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