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James Maxwell Bardeen (May 9, 1939 – June 20, 2022) was an American physicist, well known for his work in general relativity, particularly his role in formulating the laws of black hole mechanics. He also discovered the Bardeen vacuum, an exact solution of the Einstein field equation.


Early life

Bardeen was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 9, 1939. His father,
John Bardeen John Bardeen (; May 23, 1908 – January 30, 1991) was an American physicist and engineer. He is the only person to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics twice: first in 1956 with William Shockley and Walter Brattain for the invention of the tran ...
, won the Nobel Prize in Physics twice for inventing the transistor and formulating the theory of superconductivity; his mother, Jane Maxwell Bardeen, worked as a zoologist and a high school teacher. During his childhood, Bardeen resided in Washington, D.C.,
Summit, New Jersey Summit is a city in Union County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The city is located on a ridge in northern- central New Jersey, within the Raritan Valley and Rahway Valley regions in the New York metropolitan area. At the 2010 United Sta ...
, and Chicago as part of his father's employment. He attended the University Laboratory High School in Urbana, Illinois. He then studied physics at Harvard University, even though his father wanted him to go into biology. After graduating in 1960, he undertook postgraduate studies at the California Institute of Technology under the direction of Richard Feynman and William Alfred Fowler. Bardeen was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy in 1965.


Career

Bardeen first worked at Caltech and the University of California, Berkeley, in postdoctoral positions. He became a part of the astronomy department of the University of Washington in 1967. He subsequently joined Yale University in 1972. That same year, he co-authored the watershed paper "The Four Laws of Black Hole Mechanics" with Stephen Hawking and Brandon Carter during a meeting held at the École de physique des Houches. Later that year, Bardeen theorized the doughnut-shape and size of a black hole’s "shadow", which was later popularized by the observations of Messier 87 by the Event Horizon Telescope. Bardeen returned to the University of Washington in 1976, remaining there until his retirement in 2006. Together with
Michael S. Turner Michael S. Turner (born July 29, 1949) is an American theoretical cosmologist who coined the term ''dark energy'' in 1998. He is the Rauner Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Physics at the University of Chicago, having previously serv ...
and Paul Steinhardt, he published a paper in 1982 detailing the way submicroscopic fluctuations in the density of matter and energy in the early universe would bring about the arrangement of galaxies seen in the present day. Bardeen was also a Distinguished Visiting Research Fellow at Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. In 2012, he was elected to the U.S.
National Academy of Sciences The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) is a United States nonprofit, non-governmental organization. NAS is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, along with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the Nati ...
.


Personal life

Bardeen married Nancy Thomas in 1968. They met the year before in Paris while he was attending a conference, and remained married until his death. Together, they had two children, William and David. Bardeen's brother, William A. Bardeen, was also a physicist. His sister, Elizabeth, was married to Thomas Greytak, a physicist at MIT. In a 2020 interview given to Federal University of Pará in Brazil, Bardeen recalls his journey as a physicist, his father's influences on him, his experiences as a doctoral student of Richard Feynman, and working with Stephen Hawking. Bardeen died on June 20, 2022, at a retirement home in Seattle. He was 83, and suffered from cancer prior to his death.


See also

* Bardeen–Petterson effect *
Cosmological perturbation theory In physical cosmology, cosmological perturbation theory is the theory by which the ''evolution of structure'' is understood in the Big Bang model. It uses general relativity to compute the gravitational forces causing small perturbations to grow an ...
* Post-Newtonian expansion


References


External links


James Bardeen, Perimeter Institute homepage

Publications of James Maxwell Bardeen
in the SPIRES database
arXiv.org preprints for J. Bardeen

Search on author James Bardeen
from Google Scholar {{DEFAULTSORT:Bardeen, James M. 1939 births 2022 deaths 20th-century American physicists 21st-century American physicists American cosmologists American relativity theorists California Institute of Technology alumni Deaths from cancer in Washington (state) Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Harvard College alumni Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences People from Minneapolis Sloan Research Fellows University of Washington faculty Fellows of the American Physical Society