Memorable World History/Autho...

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A look at some the world's memorable world-historic moments. Més

Shirley Chisolm
Dr. Susan LaFlesche Picotte
Bob Hope and USO
Philo T. Farnsworth
Nell Donnelly Reed
Les Filles du Roi (The King's Daughters)
Mary, Queen of Scots (Part 1)
Mary, Queen of Scots (Part II)
Buddy Bolden: The Birth of Jazz (Jass)
Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Biography
Family of Pioneer Author, Laura Ingalls Wilder
The Real Story of Laura Ingalls Wilder
Rose Wilder Lane (Daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder)
Stille Nacht (Silent Night)
Catherine de Medici
Watergate Scandal (Part I)
Watergate Scandal (Part II)
Watergate Scandal (Part III)
Watergate Scandal (Part IV)
Watergate Scandal (Part V)
Watergate Scandal (Part VI)
Watergate Scandal (Part VII)
Watergate Scandal (Conclusion)
History of Ballet (Part I)
History of Ballet (Conclusion)
Chief Seattle
Sojourner Truth
Lisztomania
The Music of Teresa Carreno
Sushruta: Father of Surgery/Plastic Surgery
Thanksgiving in Canada
Massachusetts 54th Regiment
A. Gustave Eiffel (Part I)
A. Gustave Eiffel (Part II)
Mary Winston Jackson, NASA Engineer
Paul Julius Reuter
Rose Bertin: First Fashion Designer
History of Vodka
Mary Seacole (Part I)
Mary Seacole (Part II)
Alexander Dumas
Katie Sandwina: Woman of Strength and Beauty
Olga of Kiev
Transatlantic Crossings
Evliya Celebi, World Traveler
Raphael Lemkin and the Genocide Convention
Sappho
Caroline Herschel: Astronomy's Cinderella
Funny Girl: Fanny Brice
Emmy Noether: Mathmetician Trailblazer (Part I)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer (Part II)
Emmy Noether: Mathmetician Trailblazer (Part III)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer ( Part IV)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer (Part V)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer (Part VI)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer (Part VII)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer (Part VIII)
Emmy Noether: Mathematician Trailblazer (Conclusion)
6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion
The Life and Education of Laura Bridgman
The Tiara of Saitaferne
Founder of the Girl Scouts: The Life of Juliette Gordon Low
The Battle of Hastings (Part I)
The Battle of Hastings (Part II)
Baron Franz Nopsca
Stop Motion Animation
Rosalind Franklin: DNA's Dark Lady
Bacon's Rebellion
John Dee: Her Majesty's Secret Sorcerer (Part I)
John Dee: Her Majesty's Secret Sorcerer (Part II)
James G. Fair
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Secret Science: Alchemy (Part I)
Secret Science: Alchemy (Part II)
Secret Science: Alchemy (Part III)
Secret Science: Alchemy (Part IV)
Secret Science: Alchemy (Part V)
Secret Science: Alchemy (Conclusion)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Part I)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Part II)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Part III)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Part IV)
History of the First Thanksgiving (Part V)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Part VI)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Part VI)
History of the Real First Thanksgiving (Conclusion)
Evil May Day Riots
The Bawdy House Riots of 1668
Alice Hamilton: Birth of Occupational Medicine
Kamehameha I
Godzilla: Legendary Fictional Monster
Julian of Norwich
Lili'uokalani: Last Queen of Hawaii
Chester A. Arthur (Part I)
Chester A. Arthur (Part II)
History of Time Capsules
Samuel Pepys (Part I)
Samuel Pepys (Part II)
The Life, Career & Death of Marilyn Monroe (Part I)
The Life, Career & Death of Marilyn Monroe (Part II)
Origins of Christmas (Part I)
Origins of Christmas (Part II)
Origins of Halloween (Part I)
Origins of Halloween (Part II)
Hatfield-McCoy Feud (Part I)
Hatfield-McCoy Feud (Part II)
Sutton-Taylor Feud
The Woman Who Wasn't There: The Alicia Esteve Head Story
Horror Writer/Author: Stephen King (Part I)
Horror Writer/Author: Stephen King (Part II)
The Price of Gold: The Nancy Kerrigan & Tonya Harding Story (Part I)
The Price of Gold: The Nancy Kerrigan & Tonya Harding Story (Part II)
Voyeur Motel: Gerald Foos
The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles
The Life and Death of Harvey Milk (Part I)
The Life and Death of Harvey Milk (Part II)
The Life and Death of Harvey Milk (Part III)
The Life and Death of Harvey Milk (Part IV)
The Life and Death of Harvey Milk (Part V)
The Sons of Freedom: Peter V. Verigrin
The Source Family: James Baker
The Workers' Institute: Aravindan Balakrishnan
The New Vrinadanban: Kirtanananda Swami
Eastern Lightning: Zhao Weishan
The Blackburn Cult: May Otis Blackburn
The Process Church of the Final Judgment: Mary Ann MacLean & Robert De Grimston
Snake-Handling Religions
Children of Thunder: Glenn Taylor Helzer
Wayne Bent: Lord of Our Righteousness Church
Tony & Susan Alamo: The Alamo Christian Foundation
The Wesson Vampire Clan: Marcus Delon Wesson
Genghis Khan (Part I)
Genghis Khan (Part II)
Genghis Khan (Part III)
Genghis Khan (Part IV)
Genghis Khan (Part V)
Genghis Khan (Part VI)
Genghis Khan (Part VII)
Genghis Khan (Part VIII)
Genghis Khan (Part IX)
Genghis Khan (Part X)
Genghis Khan (Part XI)
Genghis Khan (Part XII)
Ergot
The Curse of the Pharaohs (The Tomb of King Tutankhamun)
Peter the Great's Cabinet of Curiosities
The First Ancient Olympic Games
Christmas Truce of 1914 (Part I)
Christmas Truce of 1914 (Part II)
Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier (Part I)
Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier (Part II)
Emperor Nero of Rome (Part I)
Emperor Nero of Rome (Part II)
Emperor Nero of Rome (Part III)
Anglo-Spanish War (Part I)
Anglo-Spanish War (Part II)
Mutually Assured Destruction (Part I)
Mutually Assured Destruction (Part II)
7 Wonders of the Ancient World
History of the Barbie Doll (Part I)
History of the Barbie Doll (Part II)
The Life and Works of Marquis de Sade (Part I)
The Life and Works of Marquis de Sade (Part II)
History of the Berlin Wall (Part I)
History of the Berlin Wall (Part II)
History of the Berlin Wall (Part III)
History of the Berlin Wall (Part IV)
History of the Donner Party (Part I)
History of the Donner Party (Part II)
History of the Donner Party (Part III)
History of the Donner Party (Part IV)
Vlad the Impaler (Part I)
Vlad the Impaler (Part II)
King Arthur (Part I)
King Arthur (Part II)
The Great Chicago Fire of 1871
Longfellow's 'Paul Revere's Ride'
Rasputin
Noah's Ark: Fact or Myth?
Beijing's Underground City
Meaning of US Political Party Symbols
History of US Presidential Debates
Marie Antoinette (Part I)
Marie Antoinette (Part II)
Alcatraz Island
Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary (Part I)
Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary (Part II)
RIP Michael Landon: A Memorial to Michael Landon
Was Irish Monk Brendan the First to Discover America?
List of Presidential Pardons
FLOTUS: First Lady of the United States
Lost Colony of Roanoke (Part I)
Lost Colony of Roanoke (Part II)
Incorruptibility of Corpse
The 'Naked' Ride of Lady Godiva
How Swing States Work
What Does #BlackLivesMatter Mean (Part I)
What Does #BlackLivesMatter Mean (Part II)
20 Deadly Cults

The Life and Disappearance of Ettore Majorana

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Ettore Majorana (/ˌmædʒəˈrænə/, Italian: [ˈɛttore majoˈraːna]; born on 5 August 1906 – probably died after 1959) was an Italian theoretical physicist who worked on neutrino masses. On March 25, 1938, he disappeared under mysterious circumstances while going by ship from Palermo to Naples. The Majorana equation and Majorana fermions are named after him. In 2006, the Majorana Prize was established in his memory.

Life and work

There are several categories of scientists in the world; those of second or third rank do their best but never get very far. Then there is the first rank, those who make important discoveries, fundamental to scientific progress. But then there are the geniuses, like Galilei and Newton. Majorana was one of these.

— (Enrico Fermi about Majorana, Rome 1938,)

Gifted in mathematics

Majorana was born in Catania, Sicily. Mathematically gifted, he was very young when he joined Enrico Fermi's team in Rome as one of the "Via Panisperna boys", who took their name from the street address of their laboratory.

His uncle Quirino Majorana was also a physicist.

He began his university studies in engineering in 1923 but switched to physics in 1928 at the urging of Emilio Segrè. His first papers dealt with problems in atomic spectroscopy.

First published academic papers

His first paper, published in 1928, was written when he was an undergraduate and coauthored by Giovanni Gentile, Jr., a junior professor in the Institute of Physics in Rome. This work was an early quantitative application to atomic spectroscopy of Fermi's statistical model of atomic structure (now known as the Thomas–Fermi model, due to its contemporaneous description by Llewellyn Thomas).

In this paper, Majorana and Gentile performed first-principles calculations within the context of this model that gave a good account of experimentally-observed core electron energies of gadolinium and uranium, and of the fine structure splitting of caesium lines observed in optical spectra. In 1931, Majorana published the first paper on the phenomenon of autoionization in atomic spectra, designated by him as "spontaneous ionization"; an independent paper in the same year, published by Allen Shenstone of Princeton University, designated the phenomenon as "auto-ionization", a name first used by Pierre Auger. This name has since become conventional, without the hyphen.

In 1932, he published a paper in the field of atomic spectroscopy concerning the behaviour of aligned atoms in time-varying magnetic fields. This problem, also studied by I.I. Rabi and others, led to an important sub-branch of atomic physics, that of radio-frequency spectroscopy. In the same year, Majorana published his paper on a relativistic theory of particles with arbitrary intrinsic momentum, in which he developed and applied infinite dimensional representations of the Lorentz group, and gave a theoretical basis for the mass spectrum of elementary particles. Like most of Majorana's papers in Italian, it languished in relative obscurity for several decades.

Experiments in 1932 by Irène Joliot-Curie and Frédéric Joliot showed the existence of an unknown particle that they suggested was a gamma ray. Majorana was the first to interpret correctly the experiment as requiring a new particle that had a neutral charge and a mass about the same as the proton; this particle is the neutron. Fermi told him to write an article, but Majorana didn't bother. James Chadwick proved the existence of the neutron by experiment later that year, and he was awarded the Nobel Prize for this discovery.

Majorana was known for not seeking credit for his discoveries, considering his work to be banal. He wrote only nine papers in his lifetime.

Work with Heisenberg, illness, isolation

"At Fermi's urging, Majorana left Italy early in 1933 on a grant from the National Research Council. In Leipzig, Germany, he met Werner Heisenberg. In letters he subsequently wrote to Heisenberg, Majorana revealed that he had found in him, not only a scientific colleague, but a warm personal friend." The Nazis had come to power in Germany as Majorana arrived there. He worked on a theory of the nucleus (published in German in 1933) which, in its treatment of exchange forces, represented a further development of Heisenberg's theory of the nucleus.

Majorana also travelled to Copenhagen, where he worked with Niels Bohr, another Nobel Prize winner, and a friend and mentor of Heisenberg.

"In the fall of 1933, Majorana returned to Rome in poor health, having developed acute gastritis in Germany and apparently suffering from nervous exhaustion. Put on a strict diet, he grew reclusive and became harsh in his dealings with his family. To his mother, with whom he had previously shared a warm relationship, he had written from Germany that he would not accompany her on their customary summer vacation by the sea. Appearing at the institute less frequently, he soon was scarcely leaving his home; the promising young physicist had become a hermit. For nearly four years he shut himself off from friends and stopped publishing."

During these years, in which he published few articles, Majorana wrote many small works on geophysics, electrical engineering, mathematics, and relativity. These unpublished papers, preserved in Domus Galileiana in Pisa, recently have been edited by Erasmo Recami and Salvatore Esposito.

He became a full professor of theoretical physics at the University of Naples in 1937, without needing to take an examination because of his "high fame of singular expertise reached in the field of theoretical physics", independently of the competition rules.

Majorana's last-published paper, in 1937, this time in Italian, was an elaboration of a symmetrical theory of electrons and positrons.

In 1937, Majorana predicted that in the class of particles known as fermions there should be particles that are their own antiparticles. This is the so-called Majorana fermion.

Solution of Majorana's equation yields particles that are their own anti-particle, now referred to as Majorana Fermions. In April 2012, some of what Majorana predicted may have been confirmed in experiments on hybrid semiconductor-superconductor wire devices. These experiments may potentially lead to a better understanding of quantum mechanics and may help build a quantum computer. There has also been speculation that at least some part of the "missing mass" in the universe, which cannot be detected except by inference of its gravitational influences, may be composed of Majorana particles.

Work on neutrino masses

Majorana did prescient theoretical work on neutrino masses, a currently active subject of research. He also worked on an idea that mass may exert a small shielding effect on gravitational waves, which did not gain much traction.

Disappearance at sea and suggested explanations

Majorana disappeared in unknown circumstances during a boat trip from Palermo to Naples on 25 March 1938. Despite several investigations, his body was not found and his fate is still uncertain. He had apparently withdrawn all of his money from his bank account prior to making his trip to Palermo. He may have travelled to Palermo hoping to visit his friend Emilio Segrè, a professor at the university there, but Segrè was in California at that time. On the day of his disappearance, Majorana sent the following note to Antonio Carrelli, Director of the Naples Physics Institute:

Dear Carrelli,

I made a decision that has become unavoidable. There isn't a bit of selfishness in it, but I realize what trouble my sudden disappearance will cause you and the students. For this as well, I beg your forgiveness, but especially for betraying the trust, the sincere friendship and the sympathy you gave me over the past months.

I ask you to remember me to all those I learned to know and appreciate in your Institute, especially Sciuti: I will keep a fond memory of them all at least until 11 pm tonight, possibly later too.

E. Majorana

This was followed rapidly by a telegram cancelling his earlier plans. He apparently bought a ticket from Palermo to Naples and was never seen again.

Several possible explanations for his disappearance have been proposed, including:

Hypothesis of suicide

Proposed by his colleagues Amaldi, Segrè and others

Hypothesis of escape to Argentina

Proposed by Erasmo Recami and Carlo Artemi (who has developed a detailed hypothetical reconstruction of Majorana's possible escape and life in Argentina)

Hypothesis of escape to Venezuela

Proposed the Rai 3 talk show "Chi l'ha Visto?" published a statement stating that Majorana was alive between 1955 and 1959, living in Valencia, Venezuela.

Hypothesis of escape to a monastery

Proposed by Sciascia (putatively the Charterhouse of Serra San Bruno)

Hypothesis of kidnapping or murder

By Bella, Bartocci, and others, to avoid his participation in the construction of an atomic weapon

Hypothesis of escape to become a beggar

By Bascone and Venturini (called the "omu cani" or "dog man" hypothesis)

Extended summaries and investigations

The Italian writer Leonardo Sciascia has summarized some of the results of these investigations and these hypotheses, however, some of Sciascia's conclusions were refuted by some of Majorana's former colleagues, including E. Amaldi and E. Segrè.

Recami critically examines various hypotheses for Majorana's disappearance who various rival explanations concerning Majorana's disappearance, including those advanced by Sciascia, and presents suggestive evidence for the proposal that Majorana travelled to Argentina.

Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben has also recently published a book that examines the case of Majorana's disappearance.

Case reopened by Rome Attorney's Office and closed with presumed emigration to Venezuela

In March 2011, Italian media reported that the Rome Attorney's Office had announced an inquiry into the statement made by a witness about meeting with Majorana in Buenos Aires in the years after World War II. On 7 June 2011 Italian media reported that the Carabinieri's RIS had analyzed a photograph of a man taken in Argentina in 1955, finding ten points of similarity with Majorana's face.

On 4 February 2015, the Rome Attorney's Office released a statement declaring that Majorana was alive between 1955–1959, living in Valencia, Venezuela. These last findings, based on new evidence, made the Office declare the case officially closed, having found no criminal evidence related to his disappearance which probably was a personal choice.

Commemoration of centenary

The year 2006 marked Majorana's centenary.

An international conference on "Ettore Majorana's legacy and the Physics of the XXI century" was held in commemoration of the centennial of Majorana's birth in Catania, October 5–6, 2006. The conference proceedings with articles of highly ranked international scientists A. Bianconi, D. Brink, N. Cabibbo, R. Casalbuoni, G. Dragoni, S. Esposito, E. Fiorini, M. Inguscio, R. W. Jackiw, L. Maiani, R. Mantegna, E. Migneco, R. Petronzio, B. Preziosi, R. Pucci, E. Recami, and Antonino Zichichi have been published by POS Proceedings of Science of SISSA, edited by Andrea Rapisarda (chairman), Paolo Castorina, Francesco Catara, Salvatore Lo Nigro, Emilio Migneco, Francesco Porto, and Emanuele Rimini.

A commemorative book of his nine collected papers, with commentary and English translations, was published by the Italian Physical Society in 2006.

Also to commemorate the centenary, the journal, Electronic Journal of Theoretical Physics] (EJTP), published a special issue of twenty articles dedicated to the modern development of Majorana's legacy. The Electronic Journal of Theoretical Physics also established a prize in his memory to mark the centenary. The Majorana Medal or Majorana Prize is an annual prize for researchers who have shown peculiar creativity, critical sense, and mathematical rigour in theoretical physics—in its broadest sense. The recipients of the 2006 Majorana Prize were Erasmo Recami (University of Bergamo and INFN) and George Sudarshan (University of Texas); of the 2007 Majorana Prize: Lee Smolin (Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Canada), Eliano Pessa (Centro Interdipartimentale di Scienze Cognitive, Università di Pavia and Dipartimento di Psicologia, Università di Pavia Piazza Botta, Italy) and Marcello Cini (Dipartimento di Fisica, Università La Sapienza, Roma, Italy)

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