Ernest David Courant, German physicist, educator. Fulbright Research fellow Cambridge (England) University, 1956; recipient Fermi award United States Department of Energy, 1986. Fellow American Physical Society (R.R. Wilson prize 1987), American Association for the Advancement of Science; member National Academy of Sciences, New York Academy of Sciences (Boris Pregel prize 1979).
Background
In this kind of generative academic influence, he can be compared to his father, the mathematician Richard Courant. The first of their four children, he was born March 26, 1920 in Göttingen, Germany, to Richard Courant and Nerina Runge Courant, a year after their marriage.
Education
Bachelor, Swarthmore College, 1940. Master of Science, University Rochester, 1942. Doctor of Philosophy, University Rochester, 1943.
Master of Arts (honorary), Yale University, 1962. Doctor of Science (honorary), Swarthmore College, 1988.
Career
His most notable discovery is his 1952 work with Milton South. Livingston and Hartland Snyder on the Strong focusing principle, a critical step in the development of modern particle accelerators like the synchrotron. Currently, Ernest Courant is a member the National Academy of Sciences, and remains active as a distinguished scientist emeritus at Brookhaven National Laboratory. He has played a part in the work of Brookhaven for sixty years and has also been mentor to several generations of students.
He has written that he "came by science naturally".
His mother"s father, Carl Runge, is credited with the Runge-Kutta method for numerical solutions of differential equations. A maternal great-grandfather (Runge"s father-in-law ) was Emil DuBois-Reymond, a pioneer in electrophysiology.
Affinity for science and mathematics extended further than his biological family. Ernest Courant"s childhood neighbors included the mathematician David Hilbert (his father"s thesis director, in whose honor Ernest received the middle name of David) and the physicists Max Born and James Franck.
Further, his father"s students and colleagues became friends of the family, and often visited.
Ernest"s early interests centered on chemistry. "I had a lab at home full of test tubes, Bunsen burners, and chemicals. Once there was a small fire (easily put out), but I got a sense of how things were put together." Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, and the neighborhood and its intellectual society were disrupted—along with the mathematics department at the University.
Ernest"s father had been born to a Jewish family of small businessmen, and he was now identified as a Jew, and an undesirable, by the new regime.
Expelled from his position at the University of Göttingen, Richard Courant took a temporary teaching position in England, and the family abandoned Göttingen in favor of Cambridge for a few months. Forewarned by a Nazi acquaintance that the anti-Semitic storm would not settle but intensify, the family made plans to emigrate permanently.
They returned only briefly to Germany before embarking to New York City, where his father had secured a post at New York University—and immigration visas to the United States of America. Courant graduated from the Fieldston School in 1936, received a physics degree from Swarthmore College, and earned a Doctor of Philosophy in physics from the University of Rochester in 1943. Courant has worked at Brookhaven National Laboratory from 1948 to the present, first as an associate scientist in the Proton Synchrotron Division.
He received tenure in 1955, and was promoted to senior scientist in 1960.
In addition, he taught as an Adjunct Professor at State University of New York Stony Brook from 1966 to 1986. Honors 2007 University of Rochester distinguished scholar award.
Achievements
Membership
Fellow American Physical Society (R.R. Wilson prize 1987), American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member National Academy of Sciences, New York Academy of Sciences (Boris Pregel prize 1979).
Connections
Married Sara Paul, December 9, 1944. Children: Paul N., Carl R.