Awards & Winners

Val Logsdon Fitch

Date of Birth 10-March-1923
Place of Birth Merriman
(Cherry County, Nebraska)
Nationality United States of America
Profession Physicist
Val Logsdon Fitch is an American nuclear physicist. A native of Merriman, Nebraska, he graduated from Gordon High School and attended Chadron State College for three years before being drafted into the U.S. army in 1943. He later graduated from McGill University with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering in 1948 and completed his Ph.D. in physics in 1954 from Columbia University. In World War II, he worked on the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos. He is a member of the faculty at Princeton University. Fitch and co-researcher James Watson Cronin were awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics for a 1964 experiment using the Alternating Gradient Synchrotron at Brookhaven National Laboratory that proved that certain subatomic reactions do not adhere to fundamental symmetry principles. Specifically, they proved, by examining the decay of K-mesons, that a reaction run in reverse does not merely retrace the path of the original reaction, which showed that the reactions of subatomic particles are not indifferent to time. Thus the phenomenon of CP violation was discovered. Fitch is a member of the Board of Sponsors of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

Awards by Val Logsdon Fitch

Check all the awards nominated and won by Val Logsdon Fitch.

1993


National Medal of Science for Physical Science
(For his pioneering experiments at the frontiers of physics, from his measurement of the properties of mu-mesons in nuclei to his co-discovery that nature violates a fundamental spacetime symmetry property; and for his leadership on National science policy.)

1980


Nobel Prize in Physics
(for the discovery of violations of fundamental symmetry principles in the decay of neutral K-mesons.)