I was born in Basle, Switzerland, on
20th April 1927. The first years of my life were spent with my
parents in Salzburg, Austria, where my father was studying music.
Hereafter, my mother and I moved to Dornach near Basle to the
home of my grandparents, and from there to Lugano in the
italian-speaking part of Switzerland. Here, I attended school and
thus became fluent in the Italian language.
My mother died when I was eleven years old, and I attended the
Evangelical College in Schiers, situated in a mountain valley in
eastern Switzerland. I remained there until I obtained my
baccalaureate (Mature) seven years later. This means I arrived in
Schiers just before the Second World War started, and left just
after it terminated. This was indeed quite a unique situation for
us youngsters. Here, in a neutral country, we followed the events
of the war worldwide, even in discussion groups in the classes.
These college years in Schiers were of significance for my
career.
The school was liberal in the spirit of the nineteenth century,
and intellectually quite demanding. We were also very active in
sports, I especially so in alpine skiing. In my spare time, I
became quite involved in building radios and was so fascinated
that I really wanted to become an electrical engineer. However,
in view of my abilities, my chemistry tutor, Dr. Saurer,
eventually convinced me to study physics.
At the age of 19, I did my basic military training in the Swiss
army. Upon its completion, I enrolled in the famous Physics and
Mathematics Department of the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (ETH) in Zürich. Our freshman group was more than
three times the normal size. We were called the "atombomb
semester", as just prior to our enrollment nuclear weapons had
been used for the first time, and many students had become
interested in nuclear physics. The basic course was taught by
Paul Scherrer and his vivid demonstrations had a lasting effect
on my approach to physics. Other courses were in part not as
illuminating, so that, despite good grades, I once seriously
considered switching to electrical engineering. However, Dr. W.
Kanzig, responsible for the advanced physics practicum, convinced
me to continue. In the later semesters, Wolfgang Pauli, whose courses and
examinations I took, formed and impressed me. He was truly a wise
man with a deep understanding of nature and the human being. I
did my diploma work under Prof. G. Busch on the Hall effect of
grey tin, now known as a semimetal, and, prompted by his fine
lectures, also became acquainted with modern solid-state
physics.
After obtaining my diploma, following my interest in
applications, I worked for one year in the Department of
Industrial Research (AFIF) of the ETH on the Eidophor large-scale
display system. Then I returned to Prof. Busch's group as an
assistant and started my thesis on paramagnetic resonance (EPR).
At one point, Dr. H. Granicher suggested I look into the, at that
time, newly synthesized double-oxide SrTiO3. I found
and identified the EPR lines of impurity present in
Fe3+.
In spring of 1956, just before starting the latter work, Ingeborg
Marie Louise Winkler became my wife. She has always had a
substantial influence in giving me confidence in all my
undertakings, and over the past 30 years has been my mentor and
good companion, always showing interest in my work. Our son Eric,
now a dentist, was born in the summer of 1957, six months before
I submitted my thesis.
After my graduation in 1958, I accepted the offer of the Battelle
Memorial Institute in Geneva to join the staff. I soon became the
manager of a magnetic resonance group. Some of the more
interesting investigations were conducted on layered compounds,
especially on radiation damage in graphite and alkalimetal
graphites. The general manager in Geneva, Dr. H. Thiemann, had a
strong personality, and his ever-repeated words "one should look
for the extraordinary" made a lasting impression on me. Our stay
in Geneva was most enjoyable for the family, especially for two
reasons: the charm of the city and the birth of our daughter
Silvia, now a kindergarten teacher.
While in Geneva, I became a Lecturer (with the title of Professor
in 1970) at the University of Zürich on the recommendation
of Prof. E. Brun, who was forming a strong NMR group. Owing to
this lectureship, Prof. A.P. Speiser, on the suggestion of Dr. B.
Luthi, offered me a position as a research staff member at the
IBM Zürich Research Laboratory, Rüschlikon, in 1963.
With the exception of an almost two-year assignment, which Dr. J.
Armstrong invited me to spend at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research
Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., I have been here ever since.
For almost 15 years, research on SrTiO3 and related
perovskite compounds absorbed my interest: this work, performed
with Walter Berlinger, concerned the photochromic properties of
various doped transition-metal ions and their chemical binding,
ferroelectric and soft-mode properties, and later especially
critical and multicritical phenomena of structural phase
transitions. In parallel, Dr. Heinrich Rohrer was studying such
effects in the antiferromagnetic system of GdAlO3. It
was an intense and also, from a personal point of view, happy and
satisfying time. While I was on sabbatical leave at the Research
Center, he and Dr. Gerd Binnig
started the Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) project. Just
before leaving for the USA, I had been involved in the hiring of
Dr. Binnig. Upon my return to Rüschlikon, I closely followed
the great progress of the STM project, especially as from 1972
onwards, I was in charge of the physics groups.
The desire to devote more time to my own work prompted me to step
down as manager in 1985. This was possible because in 1982 the
company had honored me with the status of IBM Fellow. The ensuing
work is summarized in Georg Bednorz's part of the Lecture. As he
describes there, he joined our Laboratory to pursue his diploma
work, on SrTiO3 of course! Ever since making his
acquaintance, I have deeply respected his fundamental insight
into materials, his human kindness, his working capacity and his
tenacity of purpose!
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Gösta Ekspång, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1993
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.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1987
Honorary degrees
Doctor of Science, University of Geneva, Switzerland (1987),
Faculty of Physics, the Technical University of Munich, Germany
(1987), Universita degli Studi di Pavia, Italy (1987), University
of Leuven, Belgium (1988), Boston University, USA (1988), TelAviv
University, Israel (1988), the Technical University of Darmstadt,
Germany (1988), University of Nice, France (1989), Universidad
Politecnica, Madrid, Spain (1989), University of Bochum, Germany
(1990), and Universita degli Studi di Roma, Italy (1990)
Honours
Foreign Associate Member, the Academy of Sciences, USA (1989),
Special Tsukuba Award (1989), Thirteenth Fritz London Memorial
Award (1987), Dannie Heineman Prize (1987), Robert Wichard Pohl
Prize (1987), HewletPackard Europhysics Prize (1988),
Marcel-Benoist Prize (1986), Nobel Prize in Physics (1987), APS
International Prize for New Materials Research (1988), and the
Minnie Rosen Award (1988)
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1991