Alfred Kastler was born in
Guebwiller in Alsace on May 3, 1902. He followed his early
studies at the school in his native town, and continued at the
Oberrealschule of Colmar, which became the Lycee Bartholdi in
1918, when Alsace was returned to France.
He entered the École Normale Superieure in 1921, and left in
1926 to teach in a lycée. He taught for 5 years, first in
the Mulhouse lycée, then in those of Colmar and Bordeaux.
The next stage of his career was in higher education: assistant
at the Bordeaux Faculty of Science from 1931 to 1936, lecturer at
Clermont-Ferrand from 1936 to 1938, professor at Bordeaux from
1938 to 1941. In 1941, in the midst of the German occupation,
Georges Bruhat asked him to come to Paris to help him in
establishing physics teaching at the Ecole Normale Superieure.
The post was provisional, but was confirmed by the allocation of
a chair in a personal capacity at the Paris Faculty of Sciences
in 1952.
His mathematics teachers at the Colmar Lycée, Fröhlich
from Bavaria and Edouard Greiner from Alsace, were the first to
awaken his interest in science. This predilection became
consolidated in the special mathematics class held by Mahuet and
Brunold, who helped Kastler to gain entry to the École
Normale Superieure by the side entrance, so to speak. In the
stimulating and friendly atmosphere of this college, the teacher
Eugène Bloch (who came from the upper Rhine and who
subsequently disappeared without trace in Auschwitz) initiated
his students into the concepts of Bohr's atom and quantum
physics, and drew Kastler's attention to Sommerfeld's book on
atomic structure and spectral lines. This book introduced him to
the principle of the conservation of momentum applied by A.
Rubinowicz to the exchange of energy between atoms and radiation.
This principle was to guide the whole of Kastler's research,
beginning with his thesis up to the most recent investigations of
the Parisian team.
Alfred Kastler was in 1931 appointed assistant to Pierre Daure,
professor at the Bordeaux Faculty of Science. His teaching duties
were then less onerous, and Kastler was able to devote all his
free time to research, aided by Professor Daure who initiated him
into experimental spectroscopy. For many years, he worked in the
field of optical spectroscopy, particularly on atomic
fluorescence and Raman spectroscopy. [In I937 he became
interested in the luminescence of sodium atoms in the upper
atmosphere; after establishing that the D line of the twilight
sky could be absorbed by sodium vapour, and after some studies at
Abisko where twilight is prolonged, he was able to demonstrate in
cooperation with his colleague Jean Bricard, that this line is
polarized, as it must be if the emission mechanism is one of
optical resonance produced by solar radiation.]
During the years of the occupation, French scientists were
virtually isolated from the outside world. In 1945, it was
possible to send pupils to other western countries, so that they
could bring their knowledge of the most recent devel opments in
scientific progress up to date. Among them was Jean Brossel, who
returned in 1951 in possession of a mass of information gained
under Francis Bitter at M.I.T.
Under the influence of Gorter, Rabi had very successfully applied
certain methods to the investigation of atoms in their
fundamental state. In 1949, Bitter suggested extending these same
methods to the excited states of atoms. Brossel and Kastler
together then proposed the " double resonance method ", which
combines optical resonance with magnetic resonance.
While Brossel was at M.I.T., between 1949 and 1951, he carried
out pioneer work along these lines on the excited state of the
mercury atom. At the same time, Kastler was supplementing the
method by the technique of "optical pumping", which makes it
possible to apply "optical methods for studying the microwave
resonances" to the fundamental states of atoms.
After 1951, Kastler worked in collaboration with Jean Brossel in
Paris to perfect all these methods. Among the young men and women
at the École Normale, which nurtures the intellectual elite,
they found their research workers. Their theses represent the
various stages in their collective work which has been awarded
the Nobel Prize, and of which some account is given in Kastler's
Nobel lecture.
Kastler taught as Francqui Professor at the University of Louvain
during the year 1953-1954, he hold honorary doctorates from the
University of Louvain (1955), Pisa (1960), and Oxford (1966), and he
was decorated by the University of Liége.The French and Polish
Societies of Physics and the American Society of Optics have
elected Kastler to honorary memberships. In 1962, the latter
society awarded him the first Mees medal bearing the inscrip tion
"Optics transcends all boundaries". In 1954, the British Physical
Society awarded him the prize commemorating Fernand Holweck, who
disappeared tragically in 1941. Kastler was made a member of the
Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium in 1954, and of the Paris
Academy of Sciences in 1964; in 1965, the National Centre for
Scientific Research awarded him their gold medal, at the same
time as his friend and colleague Louis Néel.
In Decermber 1924 Kastler married Elise Cosset, a former pupil of
the École Normale Supérieure. By working as a history
teacher in secondary schools she made it possible for her husband
to devote to research all the leisure time left to him by his own
teaching duties. They have three children: Daniel, born in 1926,
Mireille born in 1928, and Claude-Yves born in 1936. They have
all married, there are now six grandchildren, whose ages range
from 14 years to 10 months. Daniel is a Professor of Physics at
the Faculty of Science in Marseilles, he is working on
theoretical physics problems; Mireille is an ophthalmologist in
Paris, and Claude-Yves teaches Russian at the Arts Faculty in
Grenoble.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1963-1970, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
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.
Alfred Kastler died on January 7, 1984.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1966