JASON Group: Historical membership list
Unfortunately no individual sources mentioned, as in all the later membership lists that have been put together by ISGP. All these names were taken from known studies that the JASON Group - or JASON Defense Advisory Group - has published. Quite amazing that this simple process led to intimidation from the JASON Group.
Name | Employed | JASON | Additional |
Abarbanel, Henry | University of California; Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Institute for Nonlinear Science | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Physics. Some of the things his lab does research on are Erbium doped fiber ring lasers and information processing in biological neural assemblies. |
Alivisatos, Paul | University of California | 21th |
Chemist. Specialist in nanotechnology. |
Alvarez, Luis W. | University of California; Los Alamos; M.I.T.; MITRE; University of Chicago; Institut D'Egypte; IBM; Hewlett-Packard; PSAC | 60's-70's |
Developed the detonators for 'Fat Man' during the Manhattan Project. On board the Enola Gay as it dropped the bomb. Pushed for the development of thermo-nuclear weapons. Together with J. Allen Hynek he was a member of the January 1953 Durant Panel Report in which the recent UFO waves were debunked as paranoia and considered no threat to national security. According to the panel the phenomenon should be ignored because the "irrelevant reports" were "clogging the channels of communication". According to Hynek the Pentagon wouldn't allow any other position on the subject. Correspondence with MITRE 1958-1972. Correspondence with the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) 1961-1973. Member Science Advisory Committee, Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos. In 1965-1966, Alvarez X-rayed the great pyramid of Khafre (Giza) in search for hidden chambers. University of California, Berkeley, 'Finding Aid to the Luis W. Alvarez Papers, 1932-1988, bulk 1943-1987': "Pyramid File 1963-1973 ... National Geographic (Pyramid Project) correspondence 1964-1975 ... Ford Foundation - U.C. - Smithsonian (Pyramid Project) 1965-1971 ... Pyramid File--Articles 1965-1969 ... Lauren Yazolino (Pyramid Project) 1966-1968 ... Pyramid File - Miscellaneous 1966-1984 ... International Business Machines (IBM) (Pyramid Project) 1967-1969 ... Pyramid Project Log Book (Photographs) 1968 ... Joint UAR-USA Pyramid Project 1968-1973 ... Pyramid Project - Washington Meeting 1969 ... Pyramid Project 1970-1985 ... NSF mini-documentary, The Pyramid Probe, by Earl Pierce, with Alvarez 1973 ... SRI - Pyramid Project 1973-1974 ... Cheops [Khufu] Boat Project 1974 ... Electromagnetic Sounder Experiments at the Pyramids of Giza 1975 ... [much more]". Received the Nobel Prize in 1968. Held a lakeside talk at the Bohemian Grove in 1969.Analyzed the Zapruder film in 1967, which convinced the Church Committee in 1976 that Kennedy's headshot could have been caused by a bullet from behind, indicating Oswald was the sole assassin. Alvarez was also part of a Los Alamos committee in 1979 which in all likelyhood covered up Israeli nuclear bomb tests in the Indian Ocean by claiming the detected flashes could have been due to "unusual weather conditions". (2006, Michael Karpin, 'The Bomb in the Basement'). It is known that one of Alvarez's colleagues, the rabid anti-communist hardliner and father of the hydrogen bomb, Edward Teller, was close to the Israeli leadership and advised this country on nuclear matters. It is also known that Israel received enormous support from elements in French and U.S. intelligence in setting up a secret nuclear weapon program. In 1980, together with his son, Alvarez developed the theory that an asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Member of the National Academy of Sciences' 1982 Committee on Ballistic Acoustics that did its best to dispute the HSCA's conclusions of an over 95% probability of a grassy knoll shooter at the time of the Kennedy assassination. |
Amarel, Saul | Columbia University; DARPA | 70's-80's |
Saul Amarel was born in Salonika, Greece, and moved with his family to what became Israel, where he fought in Israel's war of independence. He then went to Columbia University and later helped develop the field of artificial intelligence. He ran the National Institutes of Health's first project on use of computers in such diverse fields as biomedicine, engineering design and ecology. Amarel served as director of the Information Sciences and Technology Office of the DARPA from 1985 to 1988. He founded the computer science department at Rutgers University. |
Banks, Peter M. | University of Michigan; Stanford University; NASA | 80's - 90's |
Professor of Physics and Engineering. Principal Investigator for NASA on many scientific projects, including three Space Shuttle experiments in the last decade. In the mid-1980s he headed an international group of scientists who assisted NASA with science planning and accommodations for the International Space Station. |
Berman, Samuel M. | University of California; Stanford University; | 70's - 80's |
Professor of Physics and an expert in the effects of light. Worked on the concept that major increases in light source efficiency are achievable. |
Bildsten, Lars | University of California; Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics; American Physical Society | 21th |
Assistant and associate professor in both the Physics and Astronomy departments at University of California, Berkeley from January 1995 through July 1999. During the most recent Decadal Survey of Astronomy and Astrophysics , Bildsten served on two NRC Panels: High Energy Astrophysics from Space and Theory, Computation and Data Exploration. He was an elected member of the Executive Committee of the High Energy Astrophysics Division of the American Astronomical Society in 2000 and 2001 and served on the NRC's Committee on Astronomy and Astrophysics from 2001 to 2005. He was recently elected to serve on the Executive Committee of the Division of Astrophysics of the American Physical Society. Today a professor at the Department of Physics of the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics. |
Block, Steven M. | Stanford University | 90's - 21th |
Professor of biological sciences and of applied physics. Studies the effect of bio-weapons. |
Branscomb, Lewis M. | Harvard; University of Colorado; University of California; Scripps Institution for Oceanography; BCSIA; IBM; National Science Board; Carnegie; RAND; MITRE; NGC; PSAC; CFR; American Ditchley Foundation | 1960's |
Professor of physics. Branscomb pioneered the study of atomic and molecular negative ions and their role in the atmospheres of the earth and stars and was a co-founder of the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA) at the University of Colorado. While there, he was Editor of the Reviews of Modern Physics. After serving as director of the U.S. National Bureau of Standards (now the Institute for Standards and Technology) from 1969–1972, he was named vice president and chief scientist of IBM Corporation and a member of the IBM Corporate Management Board. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter appointed him to the National Science Board and in 1980, he was elected chairman, serving until May 1984. Branscomb was appointed by President Lyndon Johnson to the President's Science Advisory Committee (1964–1968) and by President Ronald Reagan to the National Productivity Advisory Committee. He served twice as a director of the AAAS, member of the NAS Council and of the Governing Board of the National Research Council. He is a former president of the American Physical Society and a former president of Sigma Xi. He is a recipient of the Vannevar Bush Award of the National Science Board and the Rockefeller Public Service Award in 1957. Branscomb has written extensively on information technology, comparative science and technology policy, management of innovation and technology, and science for countering terrorism. He was the co-chair, with Richard Klausner, of the Academies' study entitled 'Making the Nation Safer: The Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism', released on June 25, 2002. Director (emeritus) of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. Research Associate at the Scripps Institution for Oceanography and the University of California, San Diego. Director of Mobil Corp.(1978-1999), RAND Corp. (1972-1982), MITRE (1987-1999), Lord Corp. (since 1987), C.S. Draper Laboratories (since 1988), and Arcturus Pharmaceutical Corp. (1992-1993). Member, JASON Division, Institute for Defense Analyses from 1962 to 1969. Member of the Committee on Japan Affairs of the National Academy of Sciences since 1989. Member of the Advisory Board of the Rand Corporation's Critical Technologies Institute since 1992. Trustee of the Carnegie Institution of Washington (1973-1989), Vanderbilt University (since 1980), National Geographic Society (since 1984), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (since 1985), and the Commonwealth Fund (1974-1980). Anno 2005, he is a member of the Advisory Council of the American Ditchley Foundation. |
Brenner, Michael | Unknown. | 21th |
One Brenner is a young mathematician from Harvard, the other is an older molecular biologist from the University of Alabama. As a JASON this person worked on projects like the nuclear deterrent, biotech, nanotech, and medical imaging technology. He also worked on a project to see how sonar could be modified so it won't cause problems for whales. |
Briggs, R. | Unknown | 1990's |
This name is mentioned in the 1992 JASON study 'Accelerator Production of Tritium (APT)'. |
Brodsky, R. | Unknown | 1990's |
This name is mentioned in the 1992 JASON study 'Accelerator Production of Tritium (APT)'. |
Caldwell, David O. | University of California | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. Director University of California Institute for Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (INPAC), which oversees 8 UC campuses, Lawrence Livermore, and Los Alamos. |
Callan, Curtis G., Jr. | Princeton University | 70's - 21th |
Professor of physics. Chairman of Princeton's Department of Physics. |
Case, Kenneth M. | Rockefeller University | 70's - 21th |
Professor of physics. Relatively unknown, but worked with many of the greats. Played an important role after WWII in the development of nuclear energy. |
Chamberlain, Joseph W. | University of Chicago Yerkes Observatory; Adler Planetarium; NASA's Lunar Science Institute | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics and astronomy Stepped down as head of the Adler Planetarium in 1991. He was quite an important NASA employee back in the early 1960's. |
Chervin, Robert | National Center for Atmospheric Research | 1990's |
Climate and Global Dynamics Division of the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Did a lot of research on the world's ocean currents. Involved in the 1992 JASON study 'CHAMMP' (now Climate Change Prediction Program). |
Christ, Norman H. | Columbia University | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. Chairman of Columbia's physics department. |
Collela, Phil | University of California | 1990's |
Computer scientist at the University of California Berkeley Lab. As a JASON he worked on a project on how to move climate models from the then (1992) current generation of supercomputers to the massively parallel computers of today. Phil was the co-creator of 'Titanium', a JAVA dialect which made it possible to produce highly detailed simulations of fluid dynamics in biological systems. |
Cornwall, John M. | University of California; Los Alamos; Defense Threat Reduction Agency; National Security Advisory Committee of Lawrence Livermore | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Physics at the UCLA and Los Alamos. |
Dally, William J. | Stanford; M.I.T. | 90's - 21th |
Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He and his group have developed the system architecture, network architecture, signaling, routing, and synchronization technology that can be found in most large parallel computers today. Chairman of the Computer Science Department at Stanford University where he leads projects on high-speed signaling, multiprocessor architecture, and graphics architecture. |
Dashen, Roger F. | Caltech; Institute for Advanced Study; University of California; U.S. Navy | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. Chairman of the UCSD Department of Physics from 1988 to 1994. Dashen was one of the most influential particle theorists of his generation and played a leading role in the development of our modern understanding of symmetries in quantum field theory. Dashen served the U.S. Navy as a high level advisor in many capacities and was for several years the chair of the Navy's top level committee on the security of SSBNs (missile carrying submarines) and other aspects of anti-submarine warfare. |
Davis, Russ E. | University of California; Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Consortium on the Ocean's Role in Climate - Abrupt Climate Change Studies | 1980's |
Professor of Chemical Engineering. |
Despain, Alvin M. | University of California; Acorn Technologies | 80's - 21th |
Professor of computer engineering. Professor in the Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Systems Departments and a staff member of Information Sciences Institute of USC. Despain is a pioneer in the study of high performance computer systems. His research group builds experimental software and hardware systems including compilers, simulators, design tools, custom VLSI processors, and multiprocessor systems. |
Diamond, Patrick H. | University of California | 90's - 21th |
Professor of Physics. Heads the Plasma Theory group at the University of California together with JASON professor Marshall N. Rosenbluth. |
Dietz, R.J. | Unknown | 1990's |
He is mentioned in the 1992 JASON study 'Accelerator Production of Tritium (APT)'. |
Dimotakis, Paul E. | Caltech | 90's - 21th |
Professor of Aeronautics and Professor of Applied Physics at Caltech. He and his group have introduced advances in signal processing, high-speed digital temporal- and image-data acquisition techniques, high-speed CCD imager design, and image-data processing. He has participated in the development of pilotless drones, high-power chemical lasers, the stealth fighter, and contributed to the development of the Space Shuttle aerodynamics. |
Drell, Sidney D. | Stanford; University of California; NRO; CIA; National Security Council; CFR; President's Science Advisory Committee | 60's - 21th |
Professor of physics. Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institute. Drell has been widely recognized for his contributions in the study of theoretical physics, particularly elementary particle processes and quantum theory. Served as a key scientific consultant to the CIA's satellite reconnaissance program and was instrumental in securing congressional approval for several NRO (existence acknowledged only in 1992 by the DoD) special projects. Co-founder of JASON. chairman of the Panel on Nuclear Weapons Safety of the House Armed Services Committee, the Technology Review Panel of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, and the U.C. President's Council that oversees Los Alamos, Lawrence Berkeley, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories. He helped establish Stanford's Center for International Security and Arms Control and was its codirector, 1983-1989. He was president of the American Physical Society in 1986 and chaired the Department of Energy's High Energy Physics Panel for nine years. From 1993 to 2001, Drell served as a member of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. From 1993 to 2001, Drell served as a member of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. He has also been a member of the Commission on Maintaining U.S. Nuclear Weapons Expertise and the President's Science Advisory Committee and has consulted for the National Security Council, the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, and the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment. |
Dyson, Freeman J. | Cornell; Princeton University | 60's - 21th |
Born in England and worked as a civilian scientist for the Royal Air Force in World War 2. Professor of physics. Cornell University made him a professor without bothering about his lack of Ph.D. He subsequently worked on nuclear reactors, solid state physics, ferromagnetism, astrophysics and biology. From 1957 to 1961 he worked on the Orion Project, which proposed the possibility of space-flight using nuclear propulsion: a prototype was demonstrated using conventional explosives, but a treaty banning the use of nuclear weapons in space caused the project to be abandoned. The Dyson sphere theory is named after him. Together with Sidney Drell the longest sitting JASON scholar. |
Eardley, Douglas M. | University of California | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Physics at UCSB Institute for Theoretical Physics. |
Fisher, Frederick H. | University of California; Scripps Institution of Oceanography | 21th |
Professor of physics. Died in 2005. Fisher began his career at Scripps Institution of Oceanography's Marine Physical Laboratory (MPL) in 1955, conducting Ph.D. thesis research. Worked his whole life at the institute and became a leader in ocean sound propagation research. At Scripps, Fisher served as vice chairman of the Scripps Staff Council. Member of the Governing Board of the American Institute of Physics from 1985-1991. |
Fitch, Val L. | Princeton University | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. As a soldier he was sent to Los Alamos to work on the Manhattan Project. Awarded the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics for a 1964 experiment that proved that certain subatomic reactions do not adhere to fundamental symmetry principles. Chairman of the Physics Department. at Princeton. |
Flatte, Stanley M. | University of California | 70's - 21th |
Professor of physics and oceanographer at UCSD. |
Foley, Henry M. | Columbia University | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics at Columbia University. Has been chairman of the physics department. Member of the advisory panel of International Security and Commerce - MX missile basing. Deceased. |
Fortson, E. Norval | University of Washington | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Physics. E. Norval Fortson is currently a professor in the Department of Physics at University of Washington. He is an expert in laser-optical techniques for atomic physics and uses laser-optical techniques to tackle issues in experimental atomic physics. Fortson is best known for his leadership in high-precision tests of such fundamental physical laws as time-reversal invariance, local Lorentz invariance and the electroweak theory. His group has repeatedly advanced the precision attainable in such measurements, producing exacting tests of theoretical ideas. |
Freedman, Michael H. | University of California; Princeton University; Microsoft | 80's - 90's |
Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the University of California at San Diego. Freedman was awarded a Fields Medal in 1986 for his work on the Poincaré conjecture, a famous 20th century math problem he solved. It seems that this achievement made him a member of the JASON Group. Theory Group at Microsoft Research. |
Frieman, Edward A. | Princeton University | 60's - 80's |
As a diver he participated in the atomic bomb tests at Bikini Atoll. He received his Ph.D. in physics in 1951. Worked at Princeton on a classified nuclear weapons program. Met with Albert Einstein, Robert Oppenheimer, and Edward Teller. Frieman served as associate director of Princeton's Plasma Physics Laboratory 1964-1979. While at Princeton, Frieman met Admiral Bobby Ray Inman (who introduced him to the world of submarines, military strategy, and naval tactics). |
Garwin, Richard L. | Columbia University; PSAC; IBM; Arms Control and Non-proliferation Advisory Board, Department of State; NRO; CFR; President's Science Advisory Committee | 60's - 21th |
Professor of physics at Columbia University. Member of the IBM Research Division. Chairman of the Arms Control and Nonproliferation Advisory Board of the Department of State from 1994 to 2001. He is the Director in Science and Technology of the Council on Foreign Relations. Garwin served on the President's Science Advisory Committee, and chaired its panels on Military Aircraft, Anti-submarine and Naval Warfare. He established standards and found solutions for electromechanical design of modern spacecraft. As a champion of Electro-Optical Imaging, he helped Henry Kissinger understand its role for the national defense of the United States. Mindjustice.org: "Garwin kindly replied to email questions in January, 2005 and said he has evaluated electromagnetic weapons for the Defense Department several times but “there are always ‘compartments’ to which even people with high-level security clearances do not have access.” Garwin concluded, “...In my analyses of the effect of radiowaves on people, I have never found any significant effect other than heating of the tissues. ...So I don't think there is much in the threat of electromagnetic signals to control or disorient people by the effect on the human brain." According to the CFR "Garwin is an internationally renowned physicist with expertise in intelligence and on nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and defenses." During the 1968 Tet-offensive Garwin, Kendall, and two other Pentagon scientists were sent to Vietnam to see how new technology might turn the tables again, especially in Khe Sanh. It is likely they had to give their opinion on the use of tactical nuclear weapons, since rumors had surfaced that the U.S. was preparing to use them. Member of the National Academy of Sciences' 1982 Committee on Ballistic Acoustics that did its best to dispute the HSCA's conclusions of an over 95% probability of a grassy knoll shooter at the time of the Kennedy assassination. |
Gell-Mann, Murray | Institute for Advanced Study; University of Chicago; University of California; Santa Fe Institute; CFR; WCS; Royal Society | 60's - 80's |
Professor of physics. In 1952 Gell-Mann joined the Institute for Nuclear Studies at the University of Chicago before he went to Caltech. The most well known part of Gell-Mann's work was his theory of 'quarks', the fundamental particles that make up the protons and neutrons of ordinary matter. Gell-Mann and others further developed his ideas to build the powerful 'standard model' of particle physics, which to this day reigns as our best theory of the nature of matter. Received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1969 for his work pertaining to the classification of subatomic particles and their interactions. In June 1972 Gell-Man was chased out of the College de France by a group of young French scientists who were outraged at his contributions to the Vietnam War. When he was questioned by the audiece about his work for JASON his response was, "I am not free to answer." Co-Chairman of the Science Board of the Santa Fe Institute. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Gell-Mann is concerned with global policy matters such as population growth, conservation and biodiversity, sustainable economic development, and geopolitical stability. Member of the Royal Society of London. Trustee of the World Conservation Society together with the Astors, Rockefellers, Phipps, Schiffs, and other elite families. In February 2006, Gell-Mann attended The Amazing Meeting in Las Vegas, a benefit for the James Randi Educational Foundation. Phil Plait (the "bad astronomer" and nemesis of Richard Hoagland) also spoke at the conference. |
Gifford, David K. | M.I.T.; Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory | 21th |
Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at MIT. Head of the Computational Genomics Group at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). |
Glaser, Donald A. | University of Michigan; University of California; Lawrence Radiation Laboratory; Brookhaven National Laboratory in NY | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics and mathematics. Worked on particle and nuclear physics in different labs. Awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1960. |
Goldberger, Marvin L. | University of California; Caltech; CFR | 60's - 80's |
Professor of Physics. In 1959 Goldberger, along with Sam Treiman (JASON scientist) established the Goldberger-Treiman relations, which gave a quantitative connection between the strong and weak interaction properties of the proton and neutron. From 1978-1987 he served as the president of CalTech where he stressed undergraduate education, and oversaw the revision of teaching standards, restructuring of curriculum, and the renovation of the undergraduate dorms. Goldberger was the cochairman of the National Research Council and a member of the Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation International Advisory Board. He has authored works such as 'Collision Theory' and was the editor of Research-Doctorate Programs in the United States: 'Continuity and Change' and 'Verification: Monitoring Disarmament' (Pugwash Monograph). Trustee (emeritus) of the Aspen Institute. |
Gomer, Robert | University of Chicago; James Franck Institute; PSAC; Directorate of Physical Sciences; Air Force Office of Scientific Research; Universities Space Research Association | 60's - 70's |
Professor of chemistry at the University of Chicago. He served on numerous scientific committees, including the President's Science Advisory Committee (1961-1965) and the Advisory Committee for the Directorate of Physical Sciences, Air Force Office of Scientific Research (1961-1975), and was a member of the Board of Directors of the Universities Space Research Association (1976-1978). From 1977 to 1983 he served as director of the James Franck Institute. |
Goodman, Jeremy | Princeton University | 90's - 21th |
Professor of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton. His research interests Astrophysical Hydrodynamics, Stellar Dynamics, Interstellar Scintillation, and Gamma-Ray Bursts. |
Gregg, Michael C. | University of Washington | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Oceanography. His longterm objectives are to understand how the ocean mixes and to develop parameterizations of mixing rates that can be used in numerical models that cannot resolve mixing processes. |
Grober, Robert | University of Maryland | 21th |
Professor of Physics. His 'Grober Lab' has a main focus on characterization of semiconductor nanostructures, characterization of photoacids in chemically amplified photoresist, and fluorescence imaging in biomedical engineering. |
Hammer, David A. | Cornell; University of California; Naval Research Laboratory; University of Maryland; American Physical Society | 80's - 21th |
J. Carlton Ward Professor of Nuclear Energy Engineering and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He has been on the Cornell faculty since 1977. Hammer worked at the Naval Research Laboratory in 1969-1976, was a Visiting Associate Professor (part time) at the University of Maryland in 1973-1976, and was an Associate Professor at UCLA in 1977; in 1983-84 and 1991, he was a Visiting Senior Fellow at Imperial College, London. He has been a consultant to several corporations and government laboratories. e holds a patent on the x-pinch x-ray source for application to lithography in microelectronics manufacturing. His research is supported by DOE and Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque. He is the Chair-Elect of the Division of Plasma Physics of the American Physical Society in 2003, and will be the Chair of the division in 2004. |
Happer, William | Princeton University; Department of Energy; University Research Board; MITRE; Marshall Institute; Magnetic Imaging Technologies Incorporated | 80's - 90's |
Professor in the Department of Physics at Princeton University, is a specialist in modern optics, optical and radiofrequency spectroscopy of atoms and molecules, and spin-polarized atoms and nuclei. From 1991 to 1993, he served as Director of Energy Research in the Department of Energy and on his return to Princeton, he was named Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics and Chair of the University Research Board. Dr. Happer has maintained an interest in applied as well as basic science and he has served as a consultant to numerous firms, charitable foundations and government agencies. From 1987 to 1990 he served as chairman of the Steering Committee of JASON, a group of scientists and engineers who advised the Federal Government on matters of defense and other technical issues. Trustee of the MITRE Corporation, the Richard Lounsbery Foundation, and the Marshall Institute. He was a co-founder in 1994 of Magnetic Imaging Technologies Incorporated (MITI), a small company specializing in the use of laser polarized noble gases for magnetic resonance imaging. Has been a consultant to many companies. |
Harvey, J. | Unknown | 1990's |
Named in the 1991 JASON study 'U.S. Special Operations Command'. He is mentioned in the 1992 JASON studies 'Continuum Approaches for Describing Solid-Liquid Flow' and 'Drag Reduction by Polymer Additives'. |
Henderson, Robert | Unknown | 90's - 21th |
Director of JASON. |
Horowitz, Paul | Harvard University | 80's - 90's |
Professor of Physics & Professor of Electrical Engineering. Important founder of SETI. Paul Horowitz’s research group is currently focused on several problems in experimental astrophysics – the search for intentional microwave transmissions from extraterrestrial intelligent civilizations (SETI), a search for highly redshifted neutral hydrogen condensations (with colleagues at MIT), and optical interferometry (with the IOTA collaboration). Member of the National Academy of Sciences' 1982 Committee on Ballistic Acoustics that did its best to dispute the HSCA's conclusions of an over 95% probability of a grassy knoll shooter at the time of the Kennedy assassination. |
Hwa, Terence | University of California | 21th |
Professor at the Physics Department of the University of California at San Diego. His lab is focused on the area of quantitative and systemic biology. This is an emerging area of research at the interface of biology, engineering, biochemistry, and statistical physics. In this post-genome era, it is clear that the complexity of a biological organism resides not merely in the intricacies of its components (e.g., proteins), but more importantly in the array of interactions these components can have with each other. |
Jeanloz, Raymond | University of California | 90's - 21th |
Raymond Jeanloz is professor of earth and planetary science and of astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley, where his group studies the nature and evolution of planetary interiors, as well as the properties of materials at high pressures. |
Joyce, Gerald F. | University of California; Scripps Research Institute | 90's - 21th |
Professor at the Departments of Chemistry and Molecular Biology at the Scripps Research Institute. Investigates Darwinian evolution in RNA and DNA molecules. |
Kammerdiener, John | University of California; Los Alamos | 1990's |
Considered one of the principal designers of the US nuclear arsenal. Kammerdiener of Los Alamos is a major designer of the 'secondaries' of thermonuclear weapons. He helped JASON with a 1995 study involving the testing of nuclear weapons without actually detonating one. |
Katz, Jonathan I. | Washington University | 80's - 21th |
Professor of physics at Washington University. Katz's work centers on gamma-ray bursts. He also works on a number of diverse topics in applied physics, biophysics and materials science. |
Keller, Joseph B. | Columbia University; Stanford | 60's - 70's |
Professor (emeritus) of Mathematics and Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University Department of Mathematics. Columbia University Research Assistant, 1944-1945. Stanford visiting professor of Mathematics 1969-1970 & 1976-1978. Professor of Mathematics and Mechanical Engineering since 1978. |
Kendall, Henry W. | M.I.T.; Union of Corcerned Scientists | 60's - 70's |
A professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Kendall won the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics with Jerome Friedman and Richard Taylor for a series of experiments (1967–1973) that showed that the fundamental particles of matter are not protons and neutrons, but smaller particles known as quarks (see elementary particles). As the founder and chair of the Union of Concerned Scientists, Kendall was openly critical in the 1980s of the Strategic Defense Initiative, or 'Star Wars' antimissile project. During the 1968 Tet-offensive Garwin, Kendall, and two other Pentagon scientists were sent to Vietnam to see how new technology might turn the tables again, especially in Khe Sanh. It is likely they had to give their opinion on the use of tactical nuclear weapons, since rumors had surfaced that the U.S. was preparing to use them. |
Kimble, H. Jeff | University of California | 1990's |
Professor of physics at Caltech. Principal Investigator of the Caltech Quantum Optics group. His group successfully proved the concept of 'quantum teleportation'. |
Kistiakowsky, George | University of California; Los Alamos | 60's - 70's |
Chemistry professor who participated in the Manhattan Project. Born in Kiev, Ukraine, he attended private schools in Kiev and Moscow until the Russian Revolution broke out in 1917. He was imprisoned by the Bolsheviks but later escaped to Germany, where he received his P.H.D in 1925. He joined the Manhattan Project in 1944, replacing Seth Neddermeyer as head of the implosion department. Under his leadership came the complex explosive lenses needed to compress the plutonium sphere uniformly to achieve critical mass. Died in 1982. |
Koonin, Steven E. | University of California; DOD; Argonne National Laboratory; CFR; British Petroleum | 90's - 21th |
Steven Koonin joined the Caltech faculty in 1975, became full professor in 1981, serving as chairman of the Faculty from 1989-1991. Professor Koonin held the position of provost (president) of Caltech from 1995 to 2004. Koonin is a member of the Council for Foreign Relations and has served on a number of advisory committees for the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense and its various national laboratories. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. His research interests include theoretical nuclear, many-body, and computational physics, nuclear astrophysics, and global environmental science. He is a member of the Board of Governors of Argonne National Laboratory. Koonin is currently on a leave of absence from his faculty position as professor of theoretical physics to serve as Chief Scientist of BP in London. |
Kroll, Norman M. |
University of California | 60's - 70's |
Seen as a brilliant pioneer in Quantum Physics. He was a founding member of the UCSD Physics department at which he still is a research professor. His interests and research work have dealt with the application of theoretical methods to a variety of areas in physics. These include quantum electrodynamics, quantum field theory, nuclear physics, nonlinear optics, plasma physics, free electron lasers, particle detectors and particle accelerators. |
Lederberg, Joshua | Stanford; Yale; Rockefeller University; CFR; NASA | 70's - 80's |
An American molecular biologist who is known for his work in genetics, artificial intelligence, and space exploration. In 1946 Lederberg and Edward Tatum announced that they had discovered genetic recombination in bacteria. Several years later Lederberg discovered that viruses called bacteriophages could transfer genetic material from one bacterium to another, a phenomenon he called transduction. Won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1958. In addition to his contributions to biology, Lederberg did extensive research in artificial intelligence. This included work in the NASA experimental programs seeking life on Mars and the chemistry expert system DENDRAL. President of the Rockefeller University 1978-1990. His protege, Edward Tatum, with whom he had won the Nobel Prize in 1958, had already joined the staff of Rockefeller University in 1957. At the time it was called the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. After Lederberg stepped down as president he became professor-emeritus of molecular genetics and informatics at Rockefeller University. Throughout his career, Lederberg was active as a scientific advisor to the U.S. government. Starting in 1950, he has been a member of various panels of the President's Science Advisory Committee. In 1979, he became a member of the U.S. Defense Science Board and the chairman of President Jimmy Carter's President's Cancer Panel. In 1994, he headed the Defense Science Board Task Force on Persian Gulf War Health Effects, which investigated Gulf War Syndrome. It concluded that there was no evidence of a 'special Gulf War Syndrome' and no evidence of biochemical exposures. In April 1998, Lederberg, met with Bill Clinton, Dr. Thomas Monath (vice-president OraVax Corporation), Jerry Hauer (Director New York's Emergency Management), William C. Patrick III, and John Deutsch (CIA Director), to negotiate the first of several multimillion dollar anthrax, smallpox, and West Nile virus vaccine contracts. Lederberg, as chairman, was the only JASON on the GWS panel. |
Lederman, Leon M. | Columbia University; University of Chicago | 60's - 70's |
Internationally renowned high-energy physicist. Won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1988. Professor Lederman was the Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics at Columbia from 1972 to 1979 and served as Director of Nevis Laboratories in Irvington, Columbia's center for experimental research in high-energy physics, from 1962 to 1979. Director (emeritus) of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Illinois (1979-1989) and holds an appointment as Pritzker Professor of Science at Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago. Dr. Lederman served as Chairman of the State of Illinois Governor's Science Advisory Committee. In 1990 he was elected President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the largest scientific organization in the U.S. |
Leith, C. | Unknown | 1990's |
He is mentioned in the 1992 JASON study 'CHAMMP Review' about a new DOE program designed to move climate models from the current generation of supercomputers to massively parallel computers of the future (like JASON Norman Christ started to work on). |
Lelevier, Robert E. | RAND | 70's - 21th |
Received the Ph.D. degree in. theoretical physics in 1952 from the UCLA. 1997 email address was lelevier@rand.org. Already named as a member of RAND in 1972. |
Levine, Herbert | University of California | 90's - 21th |
Professor of physics. His interest is in the physics of nonequilibrium processes, especially in the emergence of spatial patterns in extended systems. Within this framework, he works on issues arising in condensed matter physics, chemical physics and most recently biophysics. |
Lewis, Harold W. | University of California | 60's - 70's |
Professor of Physics at U.S. Santa Barbara. Was chairman of the Jason group in 1972. |
Lewis, Nathan S. | University of California | 90's - 21th |
Professor of Chemistry at Caltech. The research interests of Professor Lewis and his group deal with light-induced electron transfer reactions, both at surfaces and in transition metal complexes. Another major area of research in Professor Lewis' group involves novel uses of conducting organic polymers. |
Long, Darrell D. E. | University of California | 21th |
Dr. Darrell D. E. Long is Professor of Computer Science and Kumar Malavalli Endowed Professor of Storage Systems Research at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies and Director of the Storage Systems Research Center in the Jack Baskin School of Engineering. He has broad research interests in the area of computing systems including operating systems, distributed systems, high performance storage systems, fault tolerance, performance evaluation and mobile computing. His research is supported by the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, the Naval Research Laboratory, the Department of Energy (Lawrence Livermore, Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories), IBM, HP, and Microsoft. |
MacDonald, Gordon J.F. | University of California; Dartmouth College; President's Council of Environmental Quality; NASA; CFR | 70's - 90's |
MacDonald is director of the environmental studies program at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H. Formerly, he was a consultant to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and a professor of geophysics at UCLA. In 1966, MacDonald was a member of the President's Science Advisory Committee and later a member of the President's Council on Environmental Quality. One of MacDonald's predictions in the 1970's was that by 2018 the weather will be so controllable that droughts and storms could be used as weapons. He has published papers on this subject. According to Nexus Magazine, the following statement was made more than 25 years ago in a book which Brzezinski wrote while a professor at Columbia University: "Political strategists are tempted to exploit research on the brain and human behaviour. Geophysicist Gordon J. F. MacDonald-specialist in problems of warfare-says accurately-timed, artificially-excited electronic strokes 'could lead to a pattern of oscillations that produce relatively high power levels over certain regions of the Earth... In this way, one could develop a system that would seriously impair the brain performance of very large populations in selected regions over an extended period..." |
Max, Claire E. | University of California | 80's - 21th |
Founding director of Livermore Branch, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics 1984-1993. Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Professor and astronomer at the University of California since 2001. Director at the Center for Adaptive Optics since 2004. |
McEuen, Paul L. | University of California; Cornell University | 21th |
Professor of physics. Research areas: The science and technology of nanostructures, particularly carbon-based systems such as nanotubes and C60 molecules; novel fabrication techniques at the nanometer scale; scanned probe microscopy of nanostructures; assembly and measurement of chemical and biological nanostructures. |
Meiron, Dan | University of California | 21th |
Professor of applied mathematics at Caltech. As a JASON involved with testing the nuclear stockpile without actually detonating one. |
Montroll, Elliott | University of Maryland; University of Rochester; IBM | 60's - 70's |
Elliott Montroll was a research professor at the University of Maryland Institute of Fluid Dynamics and Applied Mathematics from 1951 to 1960. He also held many government positions and was the founding editor of the Journal of Mathematical Physics. His papers include lecture notes and research materials for the publication of articles on various aspects of physics and chemistry. Died in 1983. |
Muller, Richard A. | University of California; Lawrence Livermore; M.I.T. | 70's - 21th |
Professor of Physics who works at the University of California, Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His work has included attempting to understand the ice ages, dynamics at the core-mantle boundary, patterns of extinction and biodiversity through time, and the processes associated with impact cratering. One of his most well known proposals is the Nemesis hypothesis. Today, Dr. Muller teaches "Physics for Future Presidents" [1] which is a course designed to teach the concepts of physics relevant to important policy decisions such as nuclear proliferation, climate change, space travel, and energy policy. For several years, he was a monthly columnist with MIT's Technology Review. |
Munk, Walter H. | University of California | 70's - 21th |
Professor of geophysics. Elected to NAS in 1956. For the last 20 years he has worked on the development of 'Ocean Acoustic Tomography' as a technique of mapping ocean temperature. This includes 'Acoustic Thermometry of Ocean Climate' (ATOC) to monitor ocean variability on the climate scale. Lately he has worked on the dissipation of tidal energy and its role in ocean mixing. |
Nelson, David R. | Harvard University | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Physics at Harvard University's Department of Physics. David Nelson’s research focuses on collective effects in the physics and chemistry of condensed matter. He has been interested, in particular, in the interplay between fluctuations, geometry and statistical mechanics. In collaboration with his Harvard colleague, Bertrand I. Halperin, he is responsible for a theory of dislocation-mediated melting in two dimensions. |
Nierenberg, William A. | University of California; Scripps Institution of Oceanography; SEPP; NATO; State Department; CFR | 70's - 90's |
Director of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography 1965 through 1986. Member of the Board of Science Advisors at Science and Environmental Policy Project (SEPP). Science advisor to NATO and the U.S. State Department. He served on the advisory board of the Electric Power Research Institute. Director of the George C. Marshall Institute. Chairman of the first National Academy of Sciences study on the greenhouse effect, possible sea-level rises, and climate change, which was conducted in the early part of the eighties (titled: 'Changing Climate'). Frequent visitor of New York and well known at the Rockefeller University. According to a September 28, 2000 Memorial Tribute posted on the Rockefeller University website, Detlev Bronk, president of the Rockefeller University, member of the Pilgrims Society, and an alledged member of the first MJ-12 group, had been a patron of Nierenberg's career. Nierenberg died in 2000. |
Novick, (Melvin) Robert | Unknown | 80's - 90's |
Already named a member of JASON in 1987. He is mentioned in the 1996 JASON study 'Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) Review'. |
Panofsky, Wolfgang K.H. | University of California; Stanford; Princeton University; PSAC; CFR | 60's - 90's |
Involved in different projects at the UC, including the Manhattan Project 1942-1951. Professor of Physics at Stanford University since 1951 where he worked at the High Energy Physics Laboratory and SLAC. On the Advisory Council of the Department of Physics of Princeton University 1959-1961. Consultant of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency 1959-1980. President's Science Advisory Committee 1960-1964. Steering committee of JASON at the Institute for Defense Analyses 1965-1973 (officially still a member of JASON today). On the Advisory Committees of Brookhaven National Laboratory, Physics Dept. of the University of Rochester, and the Physics, Mathematics & Astronomy Deptartments of Caltech. Member of Nuclear Energy Policy Study of the Ford Foundation 1977-1978. General Advisory Committee to the President 1978-1980. Chairman of the Committee on International Security and Arms Control 1985-1993 (member since 1981). Chairman of the Board of Overseers-SSC of the Universities Research Association. |
Perkins, Francis W., Jr. | Princeton University | 70's - 21th |
Principal research physicist at Princeton's plasma physics lab. Retired in 2005 after 38 years of service. |
Peterson, Allen M. | Stanford | 70's - 90's |
Professor of Electrical Engineering and Senior Scientific Advisor. Died in 1994. |
Peurifoy, Robert | Sandia National Laboratories | 1990's |
Former vice president of Sandia National Laboratory. In 2003 he said (like most other JASON's): "If you can find somebody in a uniform in the Defense Department who can talk about new need for nuclear bunker busters without laughing, I’ll buy him a cup of coffee. It’s outlandish. It’s stupid. It is an effort to maintain a payroll at the weapons labs." Peurifoy was in charge there of all of the non-physics aspects of stockpile nuclear weapons-- especially the Arming, Firing, and Fuzing, as well as packaging, and the like. Drell and Peurifoy published an authoritative article on stockpile maintenance. Robert Peurifoy was a giant in the field of construction engineering and authored several classic books during his lifetime. He helped JASON in 1995 and 1999 when they were conducting studies about the nuclear weapons arsenal. |
Prentiss, Mara | M.I.T. | 90's - 21th |
Professor of physics. Prentiss is head of the Consortium for Light Force Dynamics, through which the group collaborates with NIST at Gaithersburg, Colorado State University, and the Harvard Chemistry Department. Other atom optics research has included theoretical and experimental work on focusing and beamsplitting techniques, including research with the Westervelt (also a JASON) group using magnetic fields to control atomic motion. |
Press, William H. | Princeton University; Harvard University; University of California; Los Alamos; U.S. Defense Science Board; Chief of Naval Operations' Executive Panel; IDA | 80's - 90's |
Professor of Astronomy and of Physics at Harvard University since 1976. Came to Los Alamos in 1998. Earlier, Press was Assistant Professor of Physics at Princeton University, and Richard Chace Tolman Research Fellow in Theoretical Physics at Caltech, where he received his Ph.D. in physics in 1972. Press, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, has published more than 140 papers in the areas of theoretical astrophysics, cosmology, and computational algorithms. Past co-Chair of the Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications (CPSMA) of the National Research Council (NRC); a past member of the NRC's Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, the Astronomy and Astrophysics Survey Committee, the Chief of Naval Operations' Executive Panel, the U.S. Defense Science Board, and a variety of other boards and committees. Trustee of the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) and serves on its Executive Committee. In 2000, he became a founding member of the Computer and Information Sciences Section of the National Academy of Sciences, and he serves as section liason to the National Research Council. |
Prince, T. | Unknown | 1990's |
In 1997 he was a member of the JASON study 'Human Genome Project'. |
Richter, Burton | Stanford | 70's - 80's |
Worked at the Stanford High Energy Physics Laboratory and Linear Accelerator Center from 1956 to 1999. Director at Varian Medical Systems, Litel Instruments Inc., AREVA Enterprises Inc. , and the International Council for Science. Member of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board. President of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP) 1999-2002. Chairman of the Board on Physics and Astronomy since 2003. Board on Physics and Astronomy. |
Ride, S. | Unknown | 1990's |
This person could have been the former astronaut / Stanford & UCSD physicist Sally Ride. Mentioned in the 1990 JASON study 'Verification Technology: Unclassified Version'. |
Rosenbluth, Marshall N. | Stanford; Princeton University; University of Texas; University of California | 70's - 21th |
Professor of Physics. Instructor at Stanford University (1949-1950), where he derived the elastic scattering cross section of electron off protons. This famous 'Rosenbluth formula' was the basis of the analysis used by Robert Hofstadter in his Nobel prize-winning experimental investigation. Joined Los Alamos Laboratory as a staff member from 1950-1956 to participate in the nation's weapons program where he became a leading member of the team that developed the hydrogen bomb. During his career in Los Alamos, he began his life-long quest to develop controlled fusion into a viable energy source. Became a professor at the Princeton Institute of Advanced Study in 1967. In 1980, Marshall Rosenbluth moved to The University of Texas at Austin, as professor and director of the newly-formed Institute of Fusion Studies (IFS). Headed the Plasma Theory group at the University of California together with JASON professor Patrick Diamond. Deceased in 2003. He was often referred to as the 'pope of plasma physics'. |
Rothaus, Oscar S. | NSA; Cornell; Princeton University; University of California | 80's - 90's |
Professor of mathematics. Mathematician for the National Security Agency in Washington, DC 1953-1960. Deputy Director of the Institute for Defense Analyses in Princeton 1960-1965. Professor at the Mathematics Department of Cornell University 1966-2003. Chairman of the Mathematics Department 1973-1976. Oscar was an outstanding contributor to the areas of several complex variables and Sobolev inequalities. |
Ruderman, Malvin A. | Columbia University | 70's - 21th |
Professor of physics and theoretical astrophysics at Columbia University. He works mainly on problems associated with collapsed objects in astrophysics, especially neutron stars. |
Sack, Seymour | University of California; Lawrence Livermore | 1990's |
One of Lawrence Livermore's key nuclear weapons designers. He played a role in the design of the egg-shaped primaries for the warheads of the MX, Poseidon, Minuteman, and Trident missiles. |
Sands, Matthew | University of California; Stanford | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. Sands was an active faculty member at UC Santa Cruz from 1969 to 1985 and continued his research activities until 1994. After retiring from UCSC, Sands worked as a consultant for SLAC and also as a computer consultant for Bay View Elementary School in Santa Cruz. |
Schwitters, Roy F. | Stanford; Harvard University; University of Texas | 90's - 21th |
Professor of physics. Associate and assistant professor at Stanford Linear Accelerator Center 1971-1979. Professor of Physics at Harvard University 1979-1990. Director at the Superconducting Super Collider Laboratory 1989-1993. Present S.W. Richardson Regents Professor of Physics at the University of Texas since 1990. Chairman of the Department of Physics at the University of Texas since 2001. |
Slichter, Charles P. | University of Illinois | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. Internationally recognized in condensed matter physics, became a member of the Illinois physics faculty in 1949. He is one of the world's top research scientists in the area of magnetic resonance and has been a leading innovator in applications of resonance techniques to understanding the structure of matter. |
Sorenson, Harold W. | University of California; Air Force; DIA; Orincon Corporation International (subsidiary of Lockheed Martin); MITRE | 1980's |
A founding faculty member of UCSD and a long-time scientific and technology advisor to the United States defense and intelligence communities. Co-founder of Orincon, the systems integration company. He served as chief scientist of the U.S. Air Force from 1985 to 1988 and arrived at MITRE in 1989, remaining until 2001. He chaired the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board from 1990 to 1993 and was a member of the Defense Intelligence Association Scientific Advisory Board from 1992 to 1986. |
Spiess, Fred N. | University of California; Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Navel Research Advisory Committee |
1980's |
Professor of physics. Professor of Oceanography at the Marine Physical Laboratory of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Joined the Marine Physical Laboratory at Scripps in 1952 and began his research career in underwater acoustics and sonar systems. Over the years, this broadened into activity in ocean engineering; design of FLIP, deeply towed instrument systems, ODP wireline re-entry, seafloor geodetic techniques, and related seagoing marine geophysics and graduate student education. From 1980-1988, Dr. Spiess was director of the University of California Institute of Marine Resources, the agency that administered the California Sea Grant Program at the time. |
Stearns, Tim | Stanford University | 21th |
Associate Professor of Biological Sciences and Genetics at Stanford University School of Medicine. Tim Stearns’s research focuses on cell biology, particularly the microtubule cytoskeleton, a dynamic network of filaments and associated motors and organizing factors found in all eukaryotic cells. He will create a program that will train undergraduates to be the next generation of leaders in biological research through close interaction with faculty members in course work, research, and advising. |
Steinhardt, Paul J. | Princeton University | 80's - 90's |
Professor of physics. Paul J. Steinhardt is the Albert Einstein Professor in Science at Princeton University, a member of the faculty in the Department of Physics and an associate faculty member in the Department of Astrophysical Sciences. Steinhardt is a theorist whose research spans problems in particle physics, astrophysics, cosmology and condensed matter physics. He is one of the architects of the 'inflationary model' of the universe, an important modification of the standard big bang picture which explains the homogeneity and geometry of the universe and the origin of the fluctuations that seeded the formation of galaxies and large-scale structure. He introduced the concepts of 'quintessence,' a dynamical form of dark energy that may account for the recently discovered cosmic acceleration. |
Stubbs, Christopher | Harvard University | 21th |
Professor of Physics at Harvard. Christopher Stubbs is an experimental physicist working at the interface between particle physics, cosmology and gravitation. His interests include experimental tests of the foundations of gravitational physics, searches for dark matter, and observational cosmology. He is one of the principal investigators on an ambitious survey that will use hundreds of supernovae to map out the recent expansion history of the Universe. |
Sullivan, Jeremiah D. | Stanford; U.S. government; NATO | 80's - 21th |
Professor of physics. He spent his postdoctoral years as a research associate in the theoretical physics group at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), then moved to Illinois, beginning as an acting assistant professor and advancing rapidly through the professorial ranks. In the early years of his career, Sullivan made significant contributions to particle physics, particularly to electromagnetic interactions and to hadron-hadron processes at high energy. In 1974, Sullivan began what ultimately developed into his major research direction when he accepted an invitation to become a member of JASON, a group of experts who provide technical analyses to the U.S. government on scientific issues relevant to national security. Every summer since 1974, he has spent six weeks working with the JASON group and has contributed significantly to its success. In addition to his direct JASON work, Professor Sullivan has also leant his expertise to a number of other important studies and reviews that have played key roles in the evolution of U.S. defense policy over the past twenty years. In 2001, he was selected by the Secretary of Energy to lead the Nuclear Nonproliferation Subcommittee of the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration Advisory Committee and received a four-year appointment to the Advisory Panel of the security-related Civil Science and Technology Sub-Programme of the NATO Science Committee. |
Tonry, John L. | Harvard University; University of California; M.I.T.; University of Hawaii | 21th |
Professor of physics who did research at Harvard, Caltech, MIT, and now at the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy. |
Townes, Charles H. | University of California; Columbia University; Bell Labs; NASA; General Motors; PSAC; State Department; IDA | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics and astronomy. Born in 1915. B.A. and a B.S. from Furman University. M.A. from Duke University in 1937. Ph.D. in physics from Caltech in 1939. Member of the technical staff of Bell Telephone Laboratories from 1933 to 1947. Remains a consultant to Bell Labs in the decades ahead. Worked extensively during World War II in designing radar bombing systems and has a number of patents in related technology. Executive director of the Columbia Radiation Laboratory 1950-1952 and chairman of the Physics Department 1952-1955. Builds the first maser (early version of laser, producing microwave rather than optical radiation) with J. P. Gordon and H. J. Zeiger at Columbia in 1953. Vice president and director of research of the Institute for Defense Analyses 1959-1961. Helped set up IDA and JASON. Nobel Prize in Physics 1964. Provost and Professor of Physics at MIT 1961-1966. Became professor at the University of California in 1966. Chairman NASA Science Advisory Committee for the Apollo lunar landing program 1966-1970. Chairman of the Defense Department’s Committee on the MX missile. First chairman of the General Motors Science Advisory Committee, founded in 1971. Director General Motors since 1974. Together with Laurance S. Rockefeller and William O. Baker (president Bell Labs at the time; NSA affiliated), Townes sat on the initial board of the General Motors Cancer Research Foundation, founded in 1978. In his 1995 book 'Making Waves', Pg. 199: "The proposed position for me was Vice President and Director of Research for the Institute for Defense Analysis. The Institute was a nonprofit "think-tank with a very important role, run by five or six prominent universities on the East Coast, Columbia University being one of them. It managed what was known as the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group. We had to pick the right people who would be responsible for analyzing how and whether a weapon worked and its effectiveness. We also advised a new organization, the Advanced Research Projects Agency, whose aim was to consider what could be done in space, and to help initiate new ideas and technologies of importance to national security. We also advised the State Department on arms control problems." |
Treiman, Sam B. | Princeton University | 80's - 90's |
Professor of physics. Considered one of the founders of modern particle physics and his imprint can be found all over the subject. |
Vesecky, John F. | University of Michigan; University of California | 80's - 21th |
Professor of Electrical Engineering. John Vesecky's technical interests are in the areas of remote sensing of the ocean surface; ocean current measuring radar for coastal ecology and oceanography, radar and radar systems, especially synthetic aperture radar (SAR); wave scattering; remote sensing and public health. Prior to joining the faculty at UCSC he was a Professor of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. |
Watson, Kenneth M. | University of California | 60's - 90's |
Professor of physics and an expert in plasma physics and scattering theory. One of the co-founders of JASON in 1959. At a faculty meeting during the time of the Cambodian invasion (during the Vietnam war - 1970) Watson was heard to comment, "Why is everyone getting so upset about such a little war?" Became a director of the Marine Physical Laboratory (MPL) in 1981, which was largely funded by the Navy. Always suspected to have been heavily involved with the military industrial complex. |
Weinberg, Steven | Columbia University; University of California; M.I.T.; Harvard; University of Texas; CFR | 60's - 70's |
Professor of Physics. His research has spanned a broad range of topics in quantum field theory, elementary particle physics, and cosmology, and has been honored with numerous awards, including the Nobel Prize in Physics. |
Weinberger, Peter J. | University of Michigan; Bell Labs; Google | 90's - 21th |
Professor of mathematics. A computer scientist who worked at AT&T Bell Labs and contributed to the design of the pioneering AWK programming language. Became head of the Computer Science Research Center at Bell Labs. Peter currently works for Google. |
Westervelt, Robert M. | Harvard University | 90's - 21th |
Robert Westervelt is Director of the NSF-funded Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center based at Harvard University. Westervelt's group studies the quantum behavior of electrons inside nanoscale structures. |
Wheeler, John A. | Princeton University; University of Texas | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics. In 1939, he worked with Niels Bohr and co-authored an article on nuclear fission in terms of quantum physics, which was the first of its time. He was the leader of the U.S. team that sought to create the first hydrogen bomb (after the Manhattan Project). Stood at the bases of the Black Hole theory. He joined the faculty at Princeton in 1938, and after 1976 was director of the Center for Theoretical Physics at the Univ. of Texas until he retired (1986). |
Wilkening, Dean | RAND Corporation; University of California; Stanford CISAC | 1990's |
After receiving his PhD in physics from Harvard University in 1982, he spent two years studying defense policy on a Ford Foundation fellowship at the Center for Science and International Affairs, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. In 1983 he joined the staff of the RAND Corporation, where he held several management positions as a senior researcher in the Engineering and Applied Sciences and International Policy departments. In addition, from 1985-1994 Wilkening taught courses on nuclear weapons policy at the University of California, Los Angeles. His major research interests include nuclear strategy, ballistic missile defense, chemical and biological weapons proliferation, and arms control. Since 1995 Dean Wilkening has been the director of the Science Program at the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC) at Stanford University. |
Williams, Ellen D. | University of Maryland | 90's - 21th |
Worked at the Department for Physics and Astronomy of the University of Maryland from 1981 to 1991. Director Chemical Physics Program at the University of Maryland 1993-1995. Professor at the Department of Physics and Institute for Physical Science & Technology of the University of Maryland 1991 - present. |
Wigner, Eugene P. | Princeton University | 60's - 70's |
Professor of Mathematical Physics at Princeton University from 1938 to 1971. Wigner worked on the Manhattan Project at the University of Chicago during World War II, from 1942 to 1945, and in 1946-1947 became Director of Research and Development at Clinton Laboratories. He is a past vice- president and president of the American Physical Society, of which he remains a member. He is a past member of the board of directors of the American Nuclear Society and still a member. He was a member of the General Advisory Committee to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission from 1952-1957, was reappointed to this committee in 1959 and served on it until 1964. Received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963. |
Woodin, W. Hugh | University of California | 90's - 21th |
Professor at the Department of Mathematics of the University of California, Berkeley. He has made many notable contributions to the theory of inner models and determinacy. His recent work on Ω-logic suggests an argument that the continuum hypothesis is false. In 1997 he was a member of the JASON study 'Human Genome Project'. He is mentioned in the 2001 JASON study 'Biofutures'. |
Wright, S. Courtnay | University of Chicago | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics at the University of Chicago since 1949. His research conducted at Chicago, Fermilab, and Los Alamos concerned pion and muon low energy physics; high energy muon proton inelastic scattering; very rare decays of muons; and accelerator design. |
York, Herbert F. | University of California; PSAC | 60's - 90's |
Professor of physics; worked on the Manhattan Project; chairman of the U.C.'s Scientific and Academic Advisory Committee, which oversees activities at both Livermore and Los Alamos National Laboratories. |
Zachariasen, Frederik | University of California | 60's - 90's |
Professor of Theoretical Physics at Caltech. Involved in many nuclear physics projects. Worked a lot with co-JASON member Murray Gell-Mann. |
Zweig, George | M.I.T.; University of California; University of Wisconsin | 60's - 70's |
Professor of physics at Caltech. As a member of the JASON Division at the Institute for Defense Analysis (1965-1972), Zweig was one of the originators of a project (still classified) of a scale and technological complexity rivaling the Manhattan project. Other defense projects he worked on include studying the circumstances under which underground nuclear explosions trigger earthquakes, and evaluating the process by which the President communicates with his nuclear forces. In 1971, Zweig took up neurobiology. In 1981, Zweig was awarded a MacArthur Prize Fellowship for his accomplishments in physics and neurobiology. (Earlier in that year, he moved his research program from Caltech to Los Alamos National Laboratory.) In 1999, he joined the Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT as a Visiting Scientist to pursue his interests in cochlear mechanics. |