(Redirected from Yang Zhenning)
'Chen-Ning Franklin Yang' () (born
22 September[1],
1922) is a
Chinese-born
American physicist who worked on
statistical mechanics and
symmetry principles.
In 1957, at the age of 35, he and
Tsung-Dao Lee received the
Nobel Prize in Physics for their theory that
weak force interactions between
elementary particles did not have
parity (mirror-reflection) symmetry. (
Chien-Shiung Wu experimentally verified the theory.) Yang's relationship with Lee turned sour around 1962 after they had received the Nobel Prize. Their quarrel has been who, among the two of them, first proposed the idea of parity non-conservation for weak interaction, up to the present day.
Yang is also well known for his collaboration with
Robert Mills in developing a
gauge theory of a new class. Such "Yang-Mills theories" are now a fundamental part of the
Standard Model of
particle physics.
Biography
Born in
Hefei,
Anhui,
China Yang attended
elementary school in
Beijing, and
middle school first in Beijing, then in
Kunming.
He received his
Bachelor of Science degree from
National Southwestern Associated University in Kunming in 1942. Two years later, he studied for his
Master of Science degree with a full
scholarship at
Tsinghua University, at the time also in Kunming. He attended the
University of Chicago on a Tsinghua University Fellowship in January 1946. There he studied for his
Ph.D. with
Edward Teller and after receiving it in 1948, remained for a year as an assistant to
Enrico Fermi. In 1949 he moved to the
Institute for Advanced Study and in 1965 to the
State University of New York at Stony Brook.
He has been elected a Fellow of the
American Physical Society and the
Academia Sinica, and was awarded an honorary doctorate by
Princeton University (1958).
Yang married
Chih-li Tu (), a teacher, in 1950 and has two sons and a daughter: Franklin Jr., Gilbert, and Eulee (in order of age). His father-in-law was the
Kuomintang General
Du Yuming.
He retired from Stony Brook in 1999 and returned to
Tsinghua University where he is the honorary director and Huang Jibei - Lu Kaiqun professor of
Center for Advanced Study (CASTU) and teaches freshmen physics. His wife died in the winter of
2003. At the age of 82, Yang became engaged to 28-year old
Weng Fan () who was studying for her masters at
Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, and married her in early 2005.
Awards
★
Nobel Prize in Physics (
1957)
★
Rumford Prize (
1980)
★
National Medal of Science (
1986)
★
Benjamin Franklin Medal (
1993)
★
Bower Award (
1994)
★
Albert Einstein Medal (
1995)
★
N. Bogoliubov Prize (
1996)
★
Lars Onsager Prize (
1999)
★
King Faisal International Prize (
2001)
References
;Books written by Yang:
★
Special problems of statistical mechanics, , C.N., Yang, University of Washington Press, 1952, ASIN B0007FZHH4
★
Elementary Particles: A Short History of Some Discoveries in Atomic Physics, , C.N., Yang, Princeton University Press, 1963, ASIN B000E1CBGG
★
Selected papers 1945-1980, with commentary (Chen Ning Yang), , C.N., Yang, W.H. Freeman, 1983, ISBN 071671406X
Notes
1. In many sources mistakenly 22 November. Yang Chen Ning Internetowa encyklopedia PWN
C.N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics(YITP)
See also
★
Yang-Mills Theory
External links
★
Nobel biography
★
YITP website (The
C.N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics at the
State University of New York at Stony Brook)
★
Past Faculty biography (
Institute for Advanced Study)
★
Symmetries and Reflections (C.N. Yang retirement symposium at the
State University of New York at Stony Brook)
★
Official homepage I (
State University of New York at Stony Brook)
★
Official homepage II (
The Chinese University of Hong Kong)