Awards & Winners

Morris Cohen

Date of Birth 27-November-1911
Place of Birth Chelsea
(Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States of America, Boston)
Nationality
Morris Cohen, born in Chelsea, Massachusetts, United States, was an American metallurgist, who spent his entire career affiliated with MIT. He graduated from his undergraduate degree in 1933, receiving his doctorate three years later, and was appointed assistant professor of metallurgy in 1937. He was appointed Professor of Physical Metallurgy in 1946, and an Institute Professor in 1975. He took emeritus status in 1982. He worked on the Manhattan Project during the Second World War. He and his colleagues developed fuel rods for Enrico Fermi's nuclear reactor at the University of Chicago. He has been awarded the gold medal by the ASM International and the Japan Institute of Metals, the National Medal of Science in 1976, and the Kyoto Prize in 1987.

Awards by Morris Cohen

Check all the awards nominated and won by Morris Cohen.

1976


National Medal of Science for Engineering
(For original research and advancement of knowledge of the physical and mechanical metallurgy of iron and steel, and especially for his work on the martensitic transformation in the hardening of steel.)