John Bardeen was born in
Madison, Wisconsin, on May 23, 1908, son of Dr. Charles R.
Bardeen, and Althea Harmer. Dr. Bardeen was Professor of Anatomy,
and Dean of the Medical School of the University of Wisconsin
at Madison. After the death of Althea, when John was about twelve
years old, Dr. Bardeen married Ruth Hames, now Mrs. Kenelm
McCauley, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
John Bardeen attended the University High School at Madison for
several years, but graduated from Madison Central High School in
1923. This was followed by a course in electrical engineering at
the University of Wisconsin, in which much extra work was taken
in mathematics and physics. After being out for a term while
working in the engineering department of the Western Electric
Company at Chicago, he graduated with a B.S. in Electrical
Engineering in 1928. He continued on at Wisconsin as a graduate
research assistant in electrical engineering for two years,
working on mathematical problems in applied geophysics and on
radiation from antennas. It was during this period that he got
his first introduction to quantum theory from Professor J.H. Van
Vleck.
Professor Leo J. Peters, under whom the research in geophysics
was done, took a position at the Gulf Research Laboratories in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Bardeen followed him there and
worked during the next three years (1930-1933) on the development
of methods for the interpretation of magnetic and gravitational
surveys. This was a stimulating period in which geophysical
methods were first being applied to prospecting for oil.
Because he felt his interests were more in pure than in applied
science, Bardeen resigned his position at Gulf in 1933 to take
graduate work in mathematical physics at Princeton
University. It was here under the leadership of Professor
E.P. Wigner, that he first became interested in solid state
physics. Before completing his thesis (on the theory of the work
function of metals) he was offered a position as Junior Fellow of
the Society of Fellows at Harvard University. He spent there the
next three years, 1935-1938, working with Professors Van Vleck and Bridgman on
problems in cohesion and electrical conduction in metals, and
also did some work on level density of nuclei. The Ph.D. degree
at Princeton was awarded in 1936.
From 1938-1941, Bardeen was an Assistant Professor of Physics at
the University of
Minnesota and from 1941-1945 a civilian physicist at the
Naval Ordnance Laboratory in Washington, D.C. Work done during
the war was on influence fields of ships for application to
underwater ordnance and mine-sweeping. After the war, in late
1945, he joined the solid state research group at the Bell
Telephone Laboratories, and remained there until 1951, when he
was appointed Professor of Electrical Engineering and of Physics
at the University of Illinois. Since 1959 he has also been
a member of the Center for Advanced Study of the
University.
Main fields of research since 1945 have been electrical
conduction in semiconductors and metals, surface properties of
semiconductors, theory of superconductivity, and diffusion of
atoms in solids. In 1957, Bardeen and two colleagues, L.N. Cooper and J.R. Schrieffer,
proposed the first successful explanation of superconductivity.
Much of his research effort since that time has been devoted to
further extensions and applications of the theory.
He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, has been (1954-1957) a
member of its Council, and on the Editorial Board of The
Physical Review and Reviews of Modern Physics. From
1959-1962, he served as a member of the United States President's
Science Advisory Committee.
Bardeen was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1954. Honours
include the Stuart Ballentine Medal of the Franklin Institute,
Philadelphia (1952) and the John Scott Medal of the City of
Philadelphia (1955), both awarded jointly with Dr. W.H. Brattain,
the Buckley Prize of the American Physical Society (1955) and
D.Sc. (Hon.) from Union College and from the University of
Wisconsin. He received the Fritz London Award for work in low
temperature physics in 1962.
Bardeen married Jane Maxwell in 1938. They have three children,
James Maxwell, William Allen and Elizabeth Ann.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
John Bardeen was also awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1972. He died on January 30, 1991.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1956