Robert Andrews Millikan - Wikipedia

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  • 1 Biography
  • 2 Research Toggle Research subsection
    • 2.1 Oil drop experiment
      • 2.1.1 Data selection controversy
    • 2.2 Photoelectric effect
    • 2.3 Cosmic rays
  • 3 Other work
  • 4 Westinghouse Time Capsules
  • 5 Personal life
  • 6 Recognition Toggle Recognition subsection
    • 6.1 Awards
    • 6.2 Memberships
    • 6.3 National awards
  • 7 Legacy Toggle Legacy subsection
    • 7.1 Name removal from college campuses
    • 7.2 Possible name removal from secondary schools during the 21st century
    • 7.3 Name removal from awards
  • 8 Famous statements
  • 9 Selected works
  • 10 See also
  • 11 References Toggle References subsection
    • 11.1 Citations
    • 11.2 Sources
  • 12 Further reading
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Appearance move to sidebar hide From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Robert Andrews Millikan) American experimental physicist (1868–1953) Not to be confused with the Nobel laureate in Chemistry Robert S. Mulliken.
Robert Millikan
Millikan in 1923
1st Chairman of the Executive Council, California Institute of Technology
In office1921–1945
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byLee DuBridge
Personal details
BornRobert Andrews Millikan(1868-03-22)March 22, 1868Morrison, Illinois, US
DiedDecember 19, 1953(1953-12-19) (aged 85)San Marino, California, US
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California
Spouse Greta Irvin Blanchard ​ ​(m. 1902; died 1953)​
Children
  • Clark
  • Glenn
  • Max
EducationMaquoketa Community High School
Alma mater
  • Oberlin College (BA, MA)
  • Columbia University (PhD)
Known for
  • Oil drop experiment
  • Photoelectric effect
Awards
  • Comstock Prize in Physics (1913)
  • AIEE Edison Medal (1922)
  • Nobel Prize in Physics (1923)
  • Hughes Medal (1923)
  • Matteucci Medal (1925)
  • ASME Medal (1926)
  • Franklin Medal (1937)
  • Oersted Medal (1940)
  • Medal for Merit (1949)
Scientific career
Fields
  • Optics
  • particle physics
Institutions
  • University of Chicago (1896–1921)
  • California Institute of Technology (1921–1945)
ThesisOn the polarization of light emitted from the surfaces of incandescent solids and liquids (1895)
Doctoral advisorOgden Rood[1]
Doctoral students See list[1]
  • Harvey Fletcher (1911)
  • Arthur J. Dempster (1916)
  • Leonard B. Loeb (1916)
  • Karl Darrow (1917)
  • Mervin Kelly (1918)
  • Ralph Sawyer (1919)
  • Vern Knudsen (1922)
  • Melvin Mooney (1923)
  • Robert Brode (1924)
  • Ira Sprague Bowen (1926)
  • Charles Lauritsen (1929)
  • Carl D. Anderson (1930)
  • Walter C. Michels (1930)
  • Robley D. Evans (1932)
  • William H. Pickering (1936)
  • Luke Chia-Liu Yuan (1940)
Signature

Robert Andrews Millikan (March 22, 1868 – December 19, 1953) was an American experimental physicist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1923 "for his work on the elementary charge of electricity and on the photoelectric effect."[2]

As Chairman of the Executive Council of Caltech (the school's governing body at the time) from 1921 to 1945, Millikan helped to turn the school into one of the leading research institutions in the United States.[3][4] He also served on the board of trustees for Science Service, now known as Society for Science & the Public, from 1921 to 1953.[citation needed]

Biography

[edit]

Robert Andrews Millikan was born on March 22, 1868, in Morrison, Illinois, the second son of The Rev. Silas Franklin Millikan and Mary Jane Andrews. He attended Maquoketa Community High School before entering Oberlin College in 1886, where he obtained a B.A. in 1891 and an M.A. in 1893. He received his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1895 with a thesis on the polarization of light emitted from incandescent surfaces.[4][5]

At the close of my sophomore year [...] my Greek professor [...] asked me to teach the course in elementary physics in the preparatory department during the next year. To my reply that I did not know any physics at all, his answer was, "Anyone who can do well in my Greek can teach physics." "All right," said I, "you will have to take the consequences, but I will try and see what I can do with it." I at once purchased an Avery's Elements of Physics, and spent the greater part of my summer vacation of 1889 at home – trying to master the subject. [...] I doubt if I have ever taught better in my life than in my first course in physics in 1889. I was so intensely interested in keeping my knowledge ahead of that of the class that they may have caught some of my own interest and enthusiasm.[6]

Millikan's enthusiasm for education continued throughout his career, and he was the coauthor of a popular and influential series of introductory textbooks,[7] which were ahead of their time in many ways. Compared to other books of the time, they treated the subject more in the way in which it was thought about by physicists. They also included many homework problems that asked conceptual questions, rather than simply requiring the student to plug numbers into a formula.

In 1895, Millikan travelled to Germany and spent a year at the Universities of Berlin and Göttingen. The following year, he returned to the United States to become an assistant at the University of Chicago. He was appointed Professor of Physics in 1910.[4]

In 1917, solar astronomer George Ellery Hale convinced Millikan to begin spending several months each year at Throop College of Technology, a small academic institution in Pasadena, California, that Hale wished to transform into a major center for scientific research and education. In 1920, Throop College was renamed the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), and the following year Millikan left the University of Chicago to become Director of the Norman Bridge Laboratory of Physics at Caltech, a position he held until his retirement in 1945. During this time, he also served as Chairman of the Executive Council of Caltech.[8]

Millikan died on December 19, 1953, in San Marino, California, at the age of 85.[9][10][11] He is interred in the "Court of Honor" at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.[12]

Research

[edit]

Oil drop experiment

[edit] Main article: Oil drop experiment
Millikan's original oil-drop apparatus, c. 1909–1910.
Millikan receives a check for over $40,000 for winning the Nobel Prize, 1924.

In 1909, Millikan worked on an experiment in which he measured the charge of a single electron. J. J. Thomson had already discovered the charge-to-mass ratio of the electron. However, the actual charge and mass values were unknown. Therefore, if one of these two values were to be discovered, the other could easily be calculated. Millikan and his then graduate student, Harvey Fletcher, used the oil drop experiment to measure the charge of the electron (as well as the electron mass, and Avogadro constant, since their relation to the electron charge was known).[13]

Millikan took sole credit in return for Fletcher claiming full authorship on a related result for his dissertation.[14] Millikan went on to win the 1923 Nobel Prize in Physics, in part for this work, and Fletcher kept the agreement a secret until his death.[15] After a publication on his first results in 1910,[16] contradictory observations by Felix Ehrenhaft started a controversy between the two physicists.[17] After improving his setup, Millikan published his seminal study in 1913.[18]

The elementary charge is one of the fundamental physical constants, and accurate knowledge of its value is of great importance. His experiment measured the force on tiny charged droplets of oil suspended against gravity between two metal electrodes. Knowing the electric field, the charge on the droplet could be determined. Repeating the experiment for many droplets, Millikan showed that the results could be explained as integer multiples of a common value (1.592 × 10−19 coulomb), which is the charge of a single electron. That this is somewhat lower than the modern value of 1.602 176 53(14) x 10−19 coulomb is probably due to Millikan's use of an inaccurate value for the viscosity of air.[19][20]

Although at the time of Millikan's oil drop experiment, it was becoming clear that there exist such things as subatomic particles, not everyone was convinced. Experimenting with cathode rays in 1897, J. J. Thomson had discovered negatively charged "corpuscles", as he called them, with a charge-to-mass ratio 1840 times that of a hydrogen ion. Similar results had been found by George FitzGerald and Walter Kaufmann. Most of what was then known about electricity and magnetism could be explained on the basis that charge is a continuous variable. This in much the same way that many of the properties of light can be explained by treating it as a continuous wave rather than as a stream of photons.

The beauty of the oil drop experiment is that as well as allowing quite accurate determination of the fundamental unit of charge, Millikan's apparatus also provided a 'hands on' demonstration that charge is actually quantized. General Electric Company's Charles Steinmetz, who had previously thought that charge is a continuous variable, became convinced otherwise after working with Millikan's apparatus.

Data selection controversy

[edit]

There is some controversy over selectivity in Millikan's use of results from his second experiment measuring the electron charge. This issue has been discussed by Allan Franklin,[21] a former high-energy experimentalist and current philosopher of science at the University of Colorado. Franklin contends that Millikan's exclusions of data do not affect the final value of the charge obtained, but that Millikan's substantial "cosmetic surgery" reduced the statistical error. This enabled Millikan to give the charge of the electron to better than one-half of one percent. In fact, if Millikan had included all of the data he discarded, the error would have been less than 2%. While this would still have resulted in Millikan's having measured the charge of e− better than anyone else at the time, the slightly larger uncertainty might have allowed more disagreement with his results within the physics community, which Millikan likely tried to avoid. David Goodstein argues that Millikan's statement, that all drops observed over a 60 day period were used in the paper, was clarified in a subsequent sentence that specified all "drops upon which complete series of observations were made". Goodstein attests that this is indeed the case and notes that five pages of tables separate the two sentences.[22]

Photoelectric effect

[edit]
Millikan and Albert Einstein at Caltech, 1932.

When Albert Einstein published his 1905 paper on the particle theory of light, Millikan was convinced that it had to be wrong, because of the vast body of evidence that had already shown that light was a wave. He undertook a decade-long experimental program to test Einstein's theory, which required building what he described as "a machine shop in vacuo" in order to prepare the very clean metal surface of the photoelectrode. His results, published in 1914, confirmed Einstein's predictions in every detail,[23] but Millikan was not convinced of Einstein's interpretation, and as late as 1916 he wrote, "Einstein's photoelectric equation... cannot in my judgment be looked upon at present as resting upon any sort of a satisfactory theoretical foundation," even though "it actually represents very accurately the behavior" of the photoelectric effect. In his 1950 autobiography, however, he declared that his work "scarcely permits of any other interpretation than that which Einstein had originally suggested, namely that of the semi-corpuscular or photon theory of light itself.[24]

Although Millikan's work formed some of the basis for modern particle physics, he was conservative in his opinions about 20th century developments in physics, as in the case of the photon theory. Another example is that his textbook, as late as the 1927 version, unambiguously states the existence of the ether, and mentions Einstein's theory of relativity only in a noncommittal note at the end of the caption under Einstein's portrait, stating as the last in a list of accomplishments that he was "author of the special theory of relativity in 1905 and of the general theory of relativity in 1914, both of which have had great success in explaining otherwise unexplained phenomena and in predicting new ones."

Millikan is also credited with measuring the value of the Planck constant by using photoelectric emission graphs of various metals.[25]

Cosmic rays

[edit]

At Caltech, most of Millikan's scientific research focused on the study of cosmic rays (a term he coined). In the 1930s, he entered into a debate with Arthur Compton over whether cosmic rays were composed of high-energy photons (Millikan's view) or charged particles (Compton's view). Millikan thought his cosmic ray photons were the "birth cries" of new atoms continually being created to counteract entropy and prevent the heat death of the universe. Compton was eventually proven right by the observation that cosmic rays are deflected by the Earth's magnetic field (hence must be charged particles).

Other work

[edit]

Millikan was Vice Chairman of the National Research Council during World War I. During that time, he helped to develop anti-submarine and meteorological devices. During his wartime service, an investigation by Inspector General William T. Wood determined that Millikan had attempted to steal another inventor's design for a centrifugal gun in order to profit personally.[26] Wood recommended termination of Millikan's army commission, but a subsequent investigation by Frank McIntyre, the executive assistant to the army chief of staff, exonerated Millikan.[26] He received the Chinese Order of Jade in 1940.[27] After the War, Millikan contributed to the works of the League of Nations' Committee on Intellectual Cooperation (from 1922, in replacement to George E. Hale, to 1931), with other prominent researchers (Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, Hendrik Lorentz, etc.).[28]

In the aftermath of the 1933 Long Beach earthquake, Millikan chaired the Joint Technical Committee on Earthquake Protection. They authored a report proposing means to minimize life and property loss in future earthquakes by advocating stricter building codes.[29]

Westinghouse Time Capsules

[edit]

In 1938, he wrote a short passage to be placed in the Westinghouse Time Capsules:[30]

At this moment, August 22, 1938, the principles of representative ballot government, such as are represented by the governments of the Anglo-Saxon, French, and Scandinavian countries, are in deadly conflict with the principles of despotism, which up to two centuries ago had controlled the destiny of man throughout practically the whole of recorded history. If the rational, scientific, progressive principles win out in this struggle there is a possibility of a warless, golden age ahead for mankind. If the reactionary principles of despotism triumph now and in the future, the future history of mankind will repeat the sad story of war and oppression as in the past.

Personal life

[edit]
Black-and-white headshot of a woman wearing a hat draped with lace
Greta Millikan in 1923

In 1902, Millikan married Greta Irvin Blanchard (1876–1953), who pre-deceased him by 3 months. They had three sons: Clark, Glenn, and Max.[4][31][32]

Millikan was a member of the organizing committee of the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics,[33] and in his private life was an enthusiastic tennis player.

A religious man and the son of a minister, in his later life, Millikan argued strongly for a complementary relationship between science and Christianity.[34][35][36][37] He dealt with this in his Terry Lectures at Yale in 1926–27, published as Evolution in Science and Religion.[38] He was a Christian theist and proponent of theistic evolution.[39]

A more controversial belief of his was eugenics. Millikan was one of the initial trustees of the Human Betterment Foundation and praised San Marino, California for being "the westernmost outpost of Nordic civilization ... [with] a population which is twice as Anglo-Saxon as that existing in New York, Chicago, or any of the great cities of this country."[40] In 1936, Millikan advised the president of Duke University in the then-racial segregated southern United States against recruiting a female physicist and argued that it would be better to hire young men.[41]

Recognition

[edit]

Awards

[edit]
Year Organization Award Citation Ref.
1913 United States National Academy of Sciences Comstock Prize in Physics [42]
1922 United States AIEE AIEE Edison Medal "For his experimental work in electrical science." [43]
1923 Sweden Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Nobel Prize in Physics "For his work on the elementary charge of electricity and on the photoelectric effect." [2]
1923 United Kingdom Royal Society Hughes Medal "For his determination of the electronic charge and of other physical constants." [44]
1925 Kingdom of Italy Accademia dei XL Matteucci Medal [45]
1926 United States ASME ASME Medal [46]
1937 United States Franklin Institute Franklin Medal "For the measurement of the charge on an electron and description of Planck's constant, and for the study of cosmic radiation." [47]
1940 United States AAPT Oersted Medal [48]

Memberships

[edit]
Year Organization Type Ref.
1914 United States American Philosophical Society Member [49]
1914 United States American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member [50]
1915 United States National Academy of Sciences Member [51]
1950 United States Optical Society of America Honorary Member [52]

National awards

[edit]
Year Head of state Award Ref.
1949 United States Harry S. Truman Medal for Merit [53]

Legacy

[edit]
The former Millikan Library at Caltech in 2010 (renamed Caltech Hall in 2021).

On January 26, 1982, Millikan was honored by the United States Postal Service with a 37¢ Great Americans series (1980–2000) postage stamp.[54]

Tektronix named a street on their Portland, Oregon, campus after Millikan[55] with the Millikan Way (MAX station) of Portland's MAX Blue Line named after the street.[clarification needed]

Name removal from college campuses

[edit]

During the mid to late 20th century, several colleges named buildings, physical features, awards, and professorships after Millikan. In 1958, Pomona College named a science building Millikan Laboratory in honor of Millikan. After reviewing Millikan's association with the eugenics movement, the college administration voted in October 2020 to rename the building as the Ms. Mary Estella Seaver and Mr. Carlton Seaver Laboratory.[56]

On the Caltech campus, several physical features, rooms, awards, and a professorship were named in honor of Millikan, including the Millikan Library, which was completed in 1966. In January 2021, on account of Millikan's affiliation with the Human Betterment Foundation, the Caltech Board of Trustees authorized removal of Millikan's name (and the names of five other historical figures affiliated with the Foundation), from campus buildings.[57] The Robert A. Millikan Library has been renamed Caltech Hall.[58] In November 2021, the Robert A. Millikan Professorship was renamed the Judge Shirley Hufstedler Professorship.[59]

This removal was opposed by mathematician Thomas C. Hales, who argued that "Millikan's beliefs fell within acceptable scientific norms of his day".[60] He further criticized the Committee on Naming and Recognition (CNR) report for "failing to meet the minimal standards of accuracy and scholarship that are expected of official documents issued by one of the world's great scientific institutions", saying that it should be retracted, and called for Caltech to "restore Robert Andrews Millikan to a place of honor."[60]

Possible name removal from secondary schools during the 21st century

[edit]

In November 2020, Millikan Middle School (formerly Millikan Junior High School) in the suburban Los Angeles neighborhood of Sherman Oaks started the process of renaming their school.[61] In February 2022, the Board of Education for the Los Angeles Unified School District voted unanimously to rename the school in honor of musician Louis Armstrong.[62]

In August 2020, the Long Beach Unified School District established a committee that would examine the need for renaming of their Robert A. Millikan High School.[63][64] An October 2023 attempt to get the school board to restart the stalled renaming process failed.[65] As of August 2024[update], Long Beach remains the only city that still has an educational institution named in honor of Millikan.

Name removal from awards

[edit]

In the spring of 2021, the American Association of Physics Teachers voted unanimously to remove Millikan's name from the Robert A. Millikan award, which honors "notable and intellectually creative contributions to the teaching of physics."[66] A few months later, AAPT announced that the award would be renamed in honor of University of Washington professor of physics Lillian C. McDermott who died the previous year.[67]

Famous statements

[edit]

"If Kevin Harding's equation and Aston's curve are even roughly correct, as I'm sure they are, for Dr. Cameron and I have computed with their aid the maximum energy evolved in radioactive change and found it to check well with observation, then this supposition of an energy evolution through the disintegration of the common elements is from the one point of view a childish Utopian dream, and from the other a foolish bugaboo."[68]

"No more earnest seekers after truth, no intellectuals of more penetrating vision can be found anywhere at any time than these, and yet every one of them has been a devout and professed follower of religion."[69]

Selected works

[edit]
Laboratory course in physics for secondary schools, 1906
  • Millikan, Robert A.; Gale, Henry G. (1906). Laboratory course in physics for secondary schools. Boston: Ginn.
  • Millikan, Robert Andrews (1917). The Electron: Its Isolation and Measurements and the Determination of Some of its Properties. The University of Chicago Press.
  • Millikan, Robert A.; Gale, Henry G. (1922). Practical physics. Boston: Ginn.
  • Millikan, Robert Andrews (1935). Electrons (+and-), Protons, Photons, Neutrons and Cosmic Rays. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Millikan, Robert Andrews (1950). The Autobiography of Robert Millikan, New York: Prentice-Hall

See also

[edit]
  • Nobel Prize controversies – Millikan is widely believed to have been denied the 1920 prize for physics owing to Felix Ehrenhaft's claims to have measured charges smaller than Millikan's elementary charge. Ehrenhaft's claims were ultimately dismissed and Millikan was awarded the prize in 1923.
  • Millikan's passage announcing emerging branch of physics under the designation of quantum theory, published in Popular Science January 1927.

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Physics Tree - Robert A. Millikan". academictree.org. Retrieved July 14, 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Nobel Prize in Physics 1923". Nobel Foundation. Archived from the original on November 2, 2008. Retrieved October 9, 2008.
  3. ^ "Archives : Fast Facts About Caltech History". archives.caltech.edu.
  4. ^ a b c d "Robert A. Millikan – Biographical". Nobel Foundation. Archived from the original on March 8, 2022.
  5. ^ Millikan, Robert Andrews (1895). On the polarization of light emitted from the surfaces of incandescent solids and liquids (PhD). OCLC 10542040. ProQuest 301691116.
  6. ^ Millikan, Robert Andrews (1980) [reprint of original 1950 edition]. The autobiography of Robert A. Millikan. Prentice-Hall. p. 14.
  7. ^ The books, coauthored with Henry Gordon Gale, were A First Course in Physics (1906), Practical Physics (1920), Elements of Physics (1927), and New Elementary Physics (1936).
  8. ^ "Robert Andrews Millikan". history.aip.org. Archived from the original on February 26, 2025. Retrieved January 6, 2026.
  9. ^ "Dr. Millikan of Caltech Dies at 85: Famous Physicist Known as Leader in Many Fields". Los Angeles Times. December 20, 1953. p. 1. ProQuest 166559215. Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan, the active founder of the California Institute of Technology and dean of the world's physicists, died in a Pasadena convalescent yesterday shortly after noon. He was 85.
  10. ^ "Robert A. Millikan, Nobel Prize Physicist". Washington Post. December 20, 1953. p. M14. ProQuest 152605614. Dr. Robert A. Millikan, dean of the American physicists and Nobel Prize winning authority, died today at a rest home. He was 85.
  11. ^ "Dr. Millikan, Nobel Prize Physicist, Dies: Scientist, 85, Known for Isolating Electron". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 20, 1953. p. A11. ProQuest 178583066. Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan, 85, world famous physicist and authority on cosmic rays, died in a rest home today. He was confined to his bed for months with infirmities of age.
  12. ^ "Solemn Tribute Paid to Dr. Robert Millikan: Friends and Admirers File Past Bier; Immortalization Services Set Today". Los Angeles Times. December 23, 1953. p. 4. ProQuest 166552921.
  13. ^ Millikan, R. A. (1910). "The isolation of an ion, a precision measurement of its charge, and the correction of Stokes's law". Science. 32 (822): 436–448. Bibcode:1910Sci....32..436M. doi:10.1126/science.32.822.436. PMID 17743310.
  14. ^ David Goodstein (January 2001). "In defense of Robert Andrews Millikan" (PDF). American Scientist. 89 (1): 54–60. Bibcode:2001AmSci..89...54G. doi:10.1511/2001.1.54. S2CID 209833984. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 3, 2001.
  15. ^ Harvey Fletcher (June 1982). "My Work with Millikan on the Oil-drop Experiment". Physics Today. 35 (6): 43–47. Bibcode:1982PhT....35f..43F. doi:10.1063/1.2915126.
  16. ^ Millikan, R.A. (1910). "A new modification of the cloud method of determining the elementary electrical charge and the most probable value of that charge". Phil. Mag. 6. 19 (110): 209. doi:10.1080/14786440208636795.
  17. ^ Ehrenhaft, F (1910). "Über die Kleinsten Messbaren Elektrizitätsmengen". Phys. Z. 10: 308.
  18. ^ Millikan, R.A. (1913). "On the Elementary Electric charge and the Avogadro Constant". Physical Review. II. 2 (2): 109–143. Bibcode:1913PhRv....2..109M. doi:10.1103/physrev.2.109.
  19. ^ Feynman, Richard, "Cargo Cult Science" Archived February 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (adapted from 1974 California Institute of Technology commencement address), Donald Simanek's Pages Archived September 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Lock Haven University, rev. August 2008.
  20. ^ Feynman, Richard Phillips; Leighton, Ralph; Hutchings, Edward (1997). "Surely you're joking, Mr. Feynman!": adventures of a curious character. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-393-31604-9. Retrieved July 10, 2010.
  21. ^ Franklin, A. (1997). "Millikan's Oil-Drop Experiments". The Chemical Educator. 2 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1007/s00897970102a. S2CID 97609199.
  22. ^ Goodstein, David (2000). "In defense of Robert Andrews Millikan" (PDF). Engineering and Science. Pasadena, California: California Institute of Technology.
  23. ^ Millikan, R. (1914). "A Direct Determination of "h."". Physical Review. 4 (1): 73–75. Bibcode:1914PhRv....4R..73M. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.4.73.2.
  24. ^ Anton Z. Capri, "Quips, quotes, and quanta: an anecdotal history of physics" (World Scientific 2007) p.96
  25. ^ Millikan, R. (1916). "A Direct Photoelectric Determination of Planck's "h"". Physical Review. 7 (3): 355–388. Bibcode:1916PhRv....7..355M. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.7.355.
  26. ^ a b Clark, Paul W.; Lyons, Laurence A. (2014). George Owen Squier: U.S. Army Major General, Inventor, Aviation Pioneer, Founder of Muzak. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. p. 177. ISBN 978-0-7864-7635-0 – via Google Books.
  27. ^ Order of Jade (China), 1940 [Awarded 1940], 1999-00253, retrieved October 27, 2024
  28. ^ Grandjean, Martin (2018). Les réseaux de la coopération intellectuelle. La Société des Nations comme actrice des échanges scientifiques et culturels dans l'entre-deux-guerres [The Networks of Intellectual Cooperation. The League of Nations as an Actor of the Scientific and Cultural Exchanges in the Inter-War Period] (PhD thesis) (in French). Université de Lausanne.
  29. ^ Millikan, Robert A.; Martel, R. R.; Austin, John C.; Hunt, Sumner; Witmer, David J.; Hill, Raymond A.; Labarre, R. V.; Bowen, Oliver G.; Noice, Blaine (June 7, 1933). "Long Beach Earthquake and Protection Against Future Earthquakes – Summary of Report by Joint Technical Committee on Earthquake Protection, Dr. Robert A. Millikan, Chairman". resolver.caltech.edu. Retrieved February 21, 2023.
  30. ^ The Time Capsule. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company. September 23, 1938. p. 46.
  31. ^ "Mrs. Millikan, 77, Dies in San Marino". Los Angeles Times. October 11, 1953. p. B1. ProQuest 166493759.
  32. ^ "Dr. Millikan, ill, Misses Funeral Rites for Wife". Los Angeles Times. October 13, 1953. p. A3. ProQuest 166545193.
  33. ^ The Games of the Xth Olympiad, Los Angeles 1932 Official Report. Los Angeles: Xth Olympiade Committee of the Games of Los Angeles, U.S.A. 1932, Ltd. 1933. pp. 28, 42. Retrieved July 1, 2021 – via LA84 Foundation Digital Library.
  34. ^ ""Millikan, Robert Andrew"". Who's Who in America 1928–1929. Vol. 15. p. 1486. OCLC 867280944.
  35. ^ Hunter, Preston (September 26, 2005). "The Religious Affiliation of Physicist Robert Andrews Millikan". Adherents.com. Archived from the original on March 2, 2006.
  36. ^ "Robert A. Millikan Biographical". The Nobel Foundation.
  37. ^ "Medicine: Science Serves God". Time. June 4, 1923. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008. Retrieved January 19, 2013.
  38. ^ Millikan, Robert Andrews (1973) [1927]. Evolution in Science and Religion. Kennikat Press. ISBN 0-8046-1702-3. OCLC 1249703293.
  39. ^ Long, Edward Le Roy (1952). Religious Beliefs of American Scientists. Westminster Press. pp. 45–48. OCLC 26347551.
  40. ^ Waxman, Sharon (March 16, 2000). "Judgment At Pasadena". Washington Post. p. C1. Retrieved March 30, 2007.
  41. ^ Subbaraman, Nidhi (November 10, 2021). "Caltech confronted its racist past. Here's what happened". Nature. 599 (7884): 194–198. Bibcode:2021Natur.599..194S. doi:10.1038/d41586-021-03052-x. PMID 34759369. S2CID 243987001.
  42. ^ "Comstock Prize in Physics". www.nasonline.org. Archived from the original on December 29, 2010. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  43. ^ "IEEE Edison Medal Recipients" (PDF). IEEE. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 3, 2024. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
  44. ^ "Hughes Medal". royalsociety.org. Retrieved October 31, 2025.
  45. ^ "Medaglie". www.accademiaxl.it (in Italian). Retrieved November 4, 2025.
  46. ^ "ASME Medal". ASME. Archived from the original on July 14, 2025. Retrieved October 1, 2011.
  47. ^ "Robert Andrews Millikan". Franklin Institute. January 15, 2014. Archived from the original on April 2, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
  48. ^ "Oersted Medal". AAPT. Archived from the original on September 6, 2025. Retrieved February 12, 2016.
  49. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Archived from the original on December 11, 2024. Retrieved November 6, 2023.
  50. ^ "Robert Andrews Millikan". www.amacad.org. Archived from the original on October 1, 2025. Retrieved November 6, 2023.
  51. ^ "Robert A. Millikan". www.nasonline.org. Archived from the original on August 4, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
  52. ^ "Robert A. Millikan". www.optica.org. Archived from the original on December 27, 2024. Retrieved September 13, 2024.
  53. ^ "Millikan, son, aide get medals of merit". New York Times. March 22, 1949. Retrieved August 30, 2018.
  54. ^ "37c Robert Millikan single". National Postal Museum.
  55. ^ "Millikan". vintageTEK Museum.
  56. ^ Ding, Jaimie; Elqutami, Yasmin; Engineer, Anushe (October 6, 2020). "Pomona to rename Millikan Laboratory, citing Robert A. Millikan's eugenics promotion". The Student Life. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
  57. ^ Rosenbaum, Thomas F. "A Statement from the President". California Institute of Technology. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  58. ^ Hiltzik, Michael (January 15, 2021). "Confronting a racist past, Caltech will excise names of eugenics backers from campus". Los Angeles Times.
  59. ^ "Caltech Approves New Names for Campus Assets and Honors". California Institute of Technology. November 8, 2021.
  60. ^ a b Hales, Thomas (February 19, 2024), "Robert Millikan, Japanese Internment, and Eugenics", European Physical Journal H, 49 (1) 11, arXiv:2309.13468, Bibcode:2024EPJH...49...11H, doi:10.1140/epjh/s13129-024-00068-5
  61. ^ "Timeline for School Renaming Process". Millikan Middle School. Archived from the original on November 27, 2020.
  62. ^ Vizcarra, Claudia (February 8, 2022). "Millikan Middle School is renamed Louis D. Amstrong Middle School". Scott M. Schmerelson, LAUSD Board member. Archived from the original on February 16, 2022.
  63. ^ Guardabascio, Mike (August 6, 2020). "After renewed cry for change, LBUSD reconvenes committee to examine school names". Long Beach Post.
  64. ^ Rosenfeld, David (July 12, 2020). "Push On To Rename Schools, Including In Long Beach". Grunion.
  65. ^ Kazenoff, Tess (October 23, 2023). "LBUSD teacher calls for renewed push to rename schools honoring racist figures". Long Beach Post.
  66. ^ "Nominations for Renaming the Robert A. Millikan Medal". AAPT News. American Association of Physics Teachers. May 2021.
  67. ^ "Lillian McDermott Medal". AAPT News. American Association of Physics Teachers. September 2021.
  68. ^ Millikan, Robert Andrews (1930). Science and the New Civilization (first ed.). Charles Scribner's and Sons. p. 95. OCLC 1450318415.
  69. ^ Millikan Robert, A. (1927). A Scientist Confesses His Faith. Christian Century. OCLC 17361802.

Sources

[edit]
  • Physics paper "On the Elementary Electrical Charge and the Avogadro Constant (extract)" Robert Andrews Millikan at www.aip.org/history, 2003
  • Works by Robert Millikan at Project Gutenberg
  • Waller, John, "Einstein's Luck: The Truth Behind Some of the Greatest Scientific Discoveries". Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-19-860719-9.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Goodstein, D., "In defense of Robert Andrews Millikan", Engineering and Science, 2000. No 4, pp30–38 (pdf).
  • Segerstråle, U (1995) Good to the last drop? Millikan stories as "canned" pedagogy, Science and Engineering Ethics vol 1, pp197–214
  • The NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty
  • Kevles, Daniel A (1979). "Robert A. Millikan". Scientific American. 240 (1): 142–151. Bibcode:1979SciAm.240a.142K. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0179-142.
  • Kargon, Robert H (1977). "The Conservative Mode: Robert A. Millikan and the Twentieth-Century Revolution in Physics". Isis. 68 (4): 509–526. doi:10.1086/351871. JSTOR 230006. S2CID 170329412.
  • Kargon, Robert H (1982). The rise of Robert Millikan: portrait of a life in American science. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Nobel Lectures, "Robert A. Millikan – Nobel Biography". Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam.
[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Andrews Millikan. Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Millikan.
  • Robert Millikan on Nobelprize.org Edit this at Wikidata including the Nobel Lecture, May 23, 1924, "The Electron and the Light-Quant from the Experimental Point of View"
  • "Robert Millikan", Famous Iowans, by Tom Longdon
  • Illustrated Millikan biography at the Wayback Machine (archived May 16, 2006). Retrieved on March 30, 2007.
  • Robert Millikan: Scientist; Archived October 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Part of a series on Notable American Unitarians.
  • Key Participants: Robert Millikan—Linus Pauling and the Nature of the Chemical Bond: A Documentary History
  • Robert Millikan—Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Works by or about Robert Millikan at the Internet Archive
  • Works by Robert Millikan at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
  • Robert Andrews Millikan at Find a Grave
  • Robert Millikan standing on right during historic gathering of the Guggenheim Board Fund for Aeronautics 1928. Orville Wright seated second from right, Charles Lindbergh standing third from right

Archival collections

[edit]
  • Robert Millikan papers [microform], 1821–1953 (bulk 1921–1953), Niels Bohr Library & Archives
  • William Polk Jesse student notebooks, 1919–1921, Niels Bohr Library & Archives (contains notes on the lectures of Robert A. Millikan, including courses taught by Millkan: Electron Theory, Quantum Theory, and Kinetic Theory)
Academic offices
Preceded byJames Schereras President of the Throop College of Technology 1st President of the California Institute of Technology 1921–1946 Succeeded byLee DuBridge
  • v
  • t
  • e
Recipients of the ASME Medal
1921–1950
  • 1921: Hjalmar G. Carlson
  • 1922: Frederick A. Halsey
  • 1923: John R. Freeman
  • 1926: Robert Andrews Millikan
  • 1927: Wilfred Lewis
  • 1928: Julian Kennedy
  • 1930: W. L. R. Emmet
  • 1931: Albert Kingsbury
  • 1933: Ambrose Swasey
  • 1934: Willis Carrier
  • 1935: Charles T. Main
  • 1936: Edward Bausch
  • 1937: Edward P. Bullard Jr.
  • 1938: Stephen J. Pigott
  • 1939: James E. Gleason
  • 1940: Charles F. Kettering
  • 1941: Theodore von Kármán
  • 1942: Ervin G. Bailey
  • 1943: Lewis K. Sillcox
  • 1944: Edward G. Budd
  • 1945: William F. Durand
  • 1946: Morris E. Leeds
  • 1947: Paul W. Kiefer
  • 1948: Frederick G. Keyes
  • 1949: Fred L. Dornbrook
  • 1950: Harvey C. Knowles
1951–1975
  • 1951: Glenn B. Warren
  • 1952: Nevin E. Funk
  • 1953: Crosby Field
  • 1954: E. Burnley Powell
  • 1955: Granville M. Read
  • 1956: Harry F. Vickers
  • 1957: Llewellyn M. K. Boelter
  • 1958: Wilbur H. Armacost
  • 1959: Martin Frisch
  • 1960: C. Richard Soderberg
  • 1962: Philip Sporn
  • 1963: Igor I. Sikorsky
  • 1964: Alan Howard
  • 1965: Jan Burgers
  • 1967: Mayo D. Hersey
  • 1968: Samuel C. Collins
  • 1969: Lloyd H. Donnell
  • 1970: Robert R. Gilruth
  • 1971: Horace Smart Beattie
  • 1972: Waloddi Weibull
  • 1973: Christopher C. Kraft Jr.
  • 1974: Nicholas J. Hoff
  • 1975: Maxime A. Faget
1976–2000
  • 1976: Raymond D. Mindlin
  • 1977: Robert W. Mann
  • 1979: Jacob P. Den Hartog
  • 1980: Soichiro Honda
  • 1981: Robert S. Hahn
  • 1983: Jack N. Binns Sr.
  • 1984: Aaron Cohen
  • 1985: Milton C. Shaw
  • 1986: Orlan W. Boston
  • 1987: Philip G. Hodge
  • 1988: Eric Reissner
  • 1989: William R. Sears
  • 1990: Harley A. Wilhelm
  • 1992: Daniel C. Drucker
  • 1993: Richard H. Gallagher
  • 1996: Robert C. Dean Jr.
  • 1997: Bernard Budiansky
  • 1998: Frank Kreith
  • 1999: H. Norman Abramson
2000–present
  • 2000: Arthur E. Bergles
  • 2001: Warren M. Rohsenow
  • 2002: Leroy S. Fletcher
  • 2003: Norman R. Augustine
  • 2004: Bradford W. Parkinson
  • 2005: Robert E. Uhrig
  • 2006: Richard J. Goldstein
  • 2007: Dean L. Kamen
  • 2008: Frank E. Talke
  • 2009: Nam-pyo Suh
  • 2010: John Abele
  • 2011: C. Daniel Mote, Jr.
  • 2012: Jan D. Achenbach
  • 2013: Siavouche Nemat-Nasser
  • 2014: Van C. Mow
  • 2015: James R. Rice
  • 2016: J. N. Reddy
  • 2017: Zdeněk P. Bažant
  • 2018: Thomas J.R. Hughes
  • 2019: Reginald I. Vachon
  • 2020: Subra Suresh
  • 2021: Pol D. Spanos
  • 2022: Katepalli R. Sreenivasan
  • 2023: Huajian Gao
  • v
  • t
  • e
IEEE Edison Medal
1909–1925
  • Elihu Thomson (1909)
  • Frank J. Sprague (1910)
  • George Westinghouse (1911)
  • William Stanley, Jr. (1912)
  • Charles F. Brush (1913)
  • Alexander Graham Bell (1914)
  • Nikola Tesla (1916)
  • John J. Carty (1917)
  • Benjamin G. Lamme (1918)
  • William Le Roy Emmet (1919)
  • Mihajlo Pupin (1920)
  • Cummings C. Chesney (1921)
  • Robert A. Millikan (1922)
  • John W. Lieb (1923)
  • John W. Howell (1924)
  • Harris J. Ryan (1925)
  • v
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  • e
Laureates of the Nobel Prize in Physics
1901–1925
  • 1901: Röntgen
  • 1902: Lorentz / Zeeman
  • 1903: Becquerel / P. Curie / M. Curie
  • 1904: Rayleigh
  • 1905: Lenard
  • 1906: J. J. Thomson
  • 1907: Michelson
  • 1908: Lippmann
  • 1909: Marconi / Braun
  • 1910: Van der Waals
  • 1911: Wien
  • 1912: Dalén
  • 1913: Kamerlingh Onnes
  • 1914: Laue
  • 1915: W. L. Bragg / W. H. Bragg
  • 1916
  • 1917: Barkla
  • 1918: Planck
  • 1919: Stark
  • 1920: Guillaume
  • 1921: Einstein
  • 1922: N. Bohr
  • 1923: Millikan
  • 1924: M. Siegbahn
  • 1925: Franck / Hertz
1926–1950
  • 1926: Perrin
  • 1927: Compton / C. Wilson
  • 1928: O. Richardson
  • 1929: De Broglie
  • 1930: Raman
  • 1931
  • 1932: Heisenberg
  • 1933: Schrödinger / Dirac
  • 1934
  • 1935: Chadwick
  • 1936: Hess / C. D. Anderson
  • 1937: Davisson / G. P. Thomson
  • 1938: Fermi
  • 1939: Lawrence
  • 1940
  • 1941
  • 1942
  • 1943: Stern
  • 1944: Rabi
  • 1945: Pauli
  • 1946: Bridgman
  • 1947: Appleton
  • 1948: Blackett
  • 1949: Yukawa
  • 1950: Powell
1951–1975
  • 1951: Cockcroft / Walton
  • 1952: Bloch / Purcell
  • 1953: Zernike
  • 1954: Born / Bothe
  • 1955: Lamb / Kusch
  • 1956: Shockley / Bardeen / Brattain
  • 1957: C. N. Yang / T. D. Lee
  • 1958: Cherenkov / Frank / Tamm
  • 1959: Segrè / Chamberlain
  • 1960: Glaser
  • 1961: Hofstadter / Mössbauer
  • 1962: Landau
  • 1963: Wigner / Goeppert Mayer / Jensen
  • 1964: Townes / Basov / Prokhorov
  • 1965: Tomonaga / Schwinger / Feynman
  • 1966: Kastler
  • 1967: Bethe
  • 1968: Alvarez
  • 1969: Gell-Mann
  • 1970: Alfvén / Néel
  • 1971: Gabor
  • 1972: Bardeen / Cooper / Schrieffer
  • 1973: Esaki / Giaever / Josephson
  • 1974: Ryle / Hewish
  • 1975: A. Bohr / Mottelson / Rainwater
1976–2000
  • 1976: Richter / Ting
  • 1977: P. W. Anderson / Mott / Van Vleck
  • 1978: Kapitsa / Penzias / R. Wilson
  • 1979: Glashow / Salam / Weinberg
  • 1980: Cronin / Fitch
  • 1981: Bloembergen / Schawlow / K. Siegbahn
  • 1982: K. Wilson
  • 1983: Chandrasekhar / Fowler
  • 1984: Rubbia / Van der Meer
  • 1985: von Klitzing
  • 1986: Ruska / Binnig / Rohrer
  • 1987: Bednorz / Müller
  • 1988: Lederman / Schwartz / Steinberger
  • 1989: Ramsey / Dehmelt / Paul
  • 1990: Friedman / Kendall / R. Taylor
  • 1991: de Gennes
  • 1992: Charpak
  • 1993: Hulse / J. Taylor
  • 1994: Brockhouse / Shull
  • 1995: Perl / Reines
  • 1996: D. Lee / Osheroff / R. Richardson
  • 1997: Chu / Cohen-Tannoudji / Phillips
  • 1998: Laughlin / Störmer / Tsui
  • 1999: 't Hooft / Veltman
  • 2000: Alferov / Kroemer / Kilby
2001–present
  • 2001: Cornell / Ketterle / Wieman
  • 2002: Davis / Koshiba / Giacconi
  • 2003: Abrikosov / Ginzburg / Leggett
  • 2004: Gross / Politzer / Wilczek
  • 2005: Glauber / Hall / Hänsch
  • 2006: Mather / Smoot
  • 2007: Fert / Grünberg
  • 2008: Nambu / Kobayashi / Maskawa
  • 2009: Kao / Boyle / Smith
  • 2010: Geim / Novoselov
  • 2011: Perlmutter / Schmidt / Riess
  • 2012: Wineland / Haroche
  • 2013: Englert / Higgs
  • 2014: Akasaki / Amano / Nakamura
  • 2015: Kajita / McDonald
  • 2016: Thouless / Haldane / Kosterlitz
  • 2017: Weiss / Barish / Thorne
  • 2018: Ashkin / Mourou / Strickland
  • 2019: Peebles / Mayor / Queloz
  • 2020: Penrose / Genzel / Ghez
  • 2021: Parisi / Hasselmann / Manabe
  • 2022: Aspect / Clauser / Zeilinger
  • 2023: Agostini / Krausz / L'Huillier
  • 2024: Hopfield / Hinton
  • 2025: Clarke / Devoret / Martinis
  • v
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1923 Nobel Prize laureates
Chemistry
  • Fritz Pregl (Austria)
Literature (1923)
  • W. B. Yeats (Republic of Ireland)
Peace
  • None
Physics
  • Robert Andrews Millikan (United States)
Physiology or Medicine
  • Frederick Banting (Canada)
  • John Macleod (Great Britain)
Nobel Prize recipients 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928
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Presidents of the American Physical Society
1899–1925
  • Henry Augustus Rowland (1899)
  • Albert A. Michelson (1901)
  • Arthur Gordon Webster (1903)
  • Carl Barus (1905)
  • Edward Leamington Nichols (1907)
  • Henry Crew (1909)
  • William Francis Magie (1911)
  • Benjamin Osgood Peirce (1913)
  • Ernest Merritt (1914)
  • Robert Andrews Millikan (1916)
  • Henry A. Bumstead (1918)
  • Joseph Sweetman Ames (1919)
  • Theodore Lyman (1921)
  • Thomas Corwin Mendenhall (1923)
  • Dayton Miller (1925)
1926–1950
  • Karl Taylor Compton (1927)
  • Henry Gale (1929)
  • William Francis Gray Swann (1931)
  • Paul D. Foote (1933)
  • Arthur Compton (1934)
  • Robert W. Wood (1935)
  • Floyd K. Richtmyer (1936)
  • Harrison M. Randall (1937)
  • Lyman James Briggs (1938)
  • John Torrence Tate Sr. (1939)
  • John Zeleny (1940)
  • George B. Pegram (1941)
  • George Stewart (1941)
  • Percy Williams Bridgman (1942)
  • Albert W. Hull (1943)
  • Arthur Jeffrey Dempster (1944)
  • Harvey Fletcher (1945)
  • Edward Condon (1946)
  • Lee Alvin DuBridge (1947)
  • J. Robert Oppenheimer (1948)
  • Francis Wheeler Loomis (1949)
  • Isidor Isaac Rabi (1950)
1951–1975
  • Charles Christian Lauritsen (1951)
  • John Hasbrouck Van Vleck (1952)
  • Enrico Fermi (1953)
  • H. Bethe (1954)
  • Raymond Thayer Birge (1955)
  • E. Wigner (1956)
  • Henry DeWolf Smyth (1957)
  • Jesse Beams (1958)
  • George Uhlenbeck (1959)
  • Victor Weisskopf (1960)
  • Frederick Seitz (1961)
  • William V. Houston (1962)
  • John Harry Williams (1963)
  • Robert Bacher (1964)
  • Felix Bloch (1965)
  • John Archibald Wheeler (1966)
  • Charles H. Townes (1967)
  • John Bardeen (1968)
  • Luis Walter Alvarez (1969)
  • Edward Mills Purcell (1970)
  • Robert Serber (1971)
  • Philip M. Morse (1972)
  • Joseph Edward Mayer (1973)
  • Pief Panofsky (1974)
  • Chien-Shiung Wu (1975)
1976–2000
  • William A. Fowler (1976)
  • George Pake (1977)
  • Norman Foster Ramsey Jr. (1978)
  • Lewis M. Branscomb (1979)
  • Herman Feshbach (1980)
  • Arthur Leonard Schawlow (1981)
  • Maurice Goldhaber (1982)
  • Robert Marshak (1983)
  • Mildred Dresselhaus (1984)
  • Robert R. Wilson (1985)
  • Sidney Drell (1986)
  • Val Logsdon Fitch (1987)
  • James A. Krumhansl (1989)
  • Eugen Merzbacher (1990)
  • Nicolaas Bloembergen (1991)
  • Ernest M. Henley (1992)
  • Donald N. Langenberg (1993)
  • Burton Richter (1994)
  • C. Kumar Patel (1995)
  • J.R. Schrieffer (1996)
  • D. Allan Bromley (1997)
  • Andrew Sessler (1998)
  • Jerome Isaac Friedman (1999)
  • James S. Langer (2000)
2001–
  • George Trilling (2001)
  • William F. Brinkman (2002)
  • Myriam Sarachik (2003)
  • Helen Quinn (2004)
  • Marvin L. Cohen (2005)
  • John Hopfield (2006)
  • Leo Kadanoff (2007)
  • Arthur Bienenstock (2008)
  • Cherry A. Murray (2009)
  • Curtis Callan (2010)
  • Barry Barish (2011)
  • Robert L. Byer (2012)
  • Michael S. Turner (2013)
  • Malcolm R. Beasley (2014)
  • Sam Aronson (2015)
  • Homer Neal (2016)
  • Laura Greene (2017)
  • Roger Falcone (2018)
  • David Gross (2019)
  • Philip H. Bucksbaum (2020)
  • Sylvester James Gates Jr. (2021)
  • Frances Hellman (2022)
  • Robert Rosner (2023)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Presidents of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
1848–1875
  • William Charles Redfield (1848)
  • Joseph Henry (1849)
  • Alexander Dallas Bache (1850)
  • Louis Agassiz (1851)
  • Benjamin Peirce (1852)
  • James D. Dana (1854)
  • John Torrey (1855)
  • James Hall (1856)
  • Alexis Caswell (1857)
  • Jacob Whitman Bailey (1857)
  • Jeffries Wyman (1858)
  • Stephen Alexander (1859)
  • Isaac Lea (1860)
  • Frederick A. P. Barnard (1866)
  • John Strong Newberry (1867)
  • Benjamin Apthorp Gould (1868)
  • John Wells Foster (1869)
  • Thomas Sterry Hunt (1870)
  • William Chauvenet (1870)
  • Asa Gray (1871)
  • J. Lawrence Smith (1872)
  • Joseph Lovering (1873)
  • John Lawrence LeConte (1874)
  • Julius Erasmus Hilgard (1875)
1876–1900
  • William Barton Rogers (1876)
  • Simon Newcomb (1877)
  • Othniel Charles Marsh (1878)
  • George Frederick Barker (1879)
  • Lewis H. Morgan (1880)
  • George Jarvis Brush (1881)
  • John William Dawson (1882)
  • Charles Augustus Young (1883)
  • Peter Lesley (1884)
  • Hubert A. Newton (1885)
  • Edward S. Morse (1886)
  • Samuel Langley (1887)
  • John Wesley Powell (1888)
  • Thomas Corwin Mendenhall (1889)
  • George Lincoln Goodale (1890)
  • Albert Benjamin Prescott (1891)
  • Joseph LeConte (1892)
  • William Harkness (1893)
  • Daniel Garrison Brinton (1894)
  • Edward W. Morley (1895)
  • Theodore Gill (1896)
  • Edward Drinker Cope (1896)
  • Oliver Wolcott Gibbs (1897)
  • William John McGee (1897)
  • Frederic Ward Putnam (1898)
  • Grove Karl Gilbert (1899)
  • Marcus Benjamin (1899)
  • Edward Orton Sr. (1899)
  • Robert Simpson Woodward (1900)
1901–1925
  • Charles Sedgwick Minot (1901)
  • Ira Remsen (1902)
  • Asaph Hall (1902)
  • Carroll D. Wright (1903)
  • William Gilson Farlow (1904)
  • Calvin M. Woodward (1905)
  • William H. Welch (1906)
  • Edward Leamington Nichols (1907)
  • Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin (1908)
  • David Starr Jordan (1909)
  • Albert A. Michelson (1910)
  • Charles Edwin Bessey (1911)
  • Edward Charles Pickering (1912)
  • Edmund Beecher Wilson (1913)
  • Charles William Eliot (1914)
  • William Wallace Campbell (1915)
  • Charles R. Van Hise (1916)
  • Theodore William Richards (1917)
  • John Merle Coulter (1918)
  • Simon Flexner (1919)
  • Leland Ossian Howard (1920)
  • E. H. Moore (1921)
  • J. Playfair McMurrich (1922)
  • Charles Doolittle Walcott (1923)
  • James McKeen Cattell (1924)
  • Mihajlo Pupin (1925)
1926–1950
  • Liberty Hyde Bailey (1926)
  • Arthur Amos Noyes (1927)
  • Henry Fairfield Osborn (1928)
  • Robert Andrews Millikan (1929)
  • Thomas Hunt Morgan (1930)
  • Franz Boas (1931)
  • John Jacob Abel (1932)
  • Henry Norris Russell (1933)
  • Edward Thorndike (1934)
  • Karl Taylor Compton (1935)
  • Edwin Conklin (1936)
  • George David Birkhoff (1937)
  • Wesley Clair Mitchell (1938)
  • Walter Bradford Cannon (1939)
  • Albert Francis Blakeslee (1940)
  • Irving Langmuir (1941)
  • Arthur Compton (1942)
  • Isaiah Bowman (1943)
  • Anton Julius Carlson (1944)
  • James B. Conant (1945)
  • Charles F. Kettering (1946)
  • Harlow Shapley (1947)
  • Edmund Ware Sinnott (1948)
  • Elvin Stakman (1949)
  • Roger Adams (1950)
1951–1975
  • Kirtley F. Mather (1951)
  • Detlev Bronk (1952)
  • Edward Condon (1953)
  • Warren Weaver (1954)
  • George Beadle (1955)
  • Paul Sears (1956)
  • Laurence H. Snyder (1957)
  • Wallace R. Brode (1958)
  • Paul E. Klopsteg (1959)
  • Chauncey D. Leake (1960)
  • Thomas Park (1961)
  • Paul Magnus Gross (1962)
  • Alan Tower Waterman (1963)
  • Laurence McKinley Gould (1964)
  • Henry Eyring (1965)
  • Alfred Romer (1966)
  • Don K. Price (1967)
  • Walter Orr Roberts (1968)
  • H. Bentley Glass (1969)
  • Athelstan Spilhaus (1970)
  • Mina Rees (1971)
  • Glenn T. Seaborg (1972)
  • Leonard M. Rieser (1973)
  • Roger Revelle (1974)
  • Margaret Mead (1975)
1976–2000
  • William D. McElroy (1976)
  • Emilio Daddario (1977–1978)
  • Edward E. David Jr. (1979)
  • Kenneth E. Boulding (1980)
  • Frederick Mosteller (1981)
  • D. Allan Bromley (1982)
  • Margaret Burbidge (1983)
  • Anna J. Harrison (1984)
  • David A. Hamburg (1985)
  • Gerard Piel (1986)
  • Lawrence Bogorad (1987)
  • Sheila Widnall (1988)
  • Walter E. Massey (1989)
  • Richard C. Atkinson (1990)
  • Donald N. Langenberg (1991)
  • Leon M. Lederman (1992)
  • F. Sherwood Rowland (1993)
  • Eloise E. Clark (1994)
  • Francisco J. Ayala (1995)
  • Rita R. Colwell (1996)
  • Jane Lubchenco (1997)
  • Mildred Dresselhaus (1998)
  • M. R. C. Greenwood (1999)
  • Stephen Jay Gould (2000)
2001–present
  • Mary L. Good (2001)
  • Peter H. Raven (2002)
  • Floyd E. Bloom (2003)
  • Mary Ellen Avery (2004)
  • Shirley Ann Jackson (2005)
  • Gil Omenn (2006)
  • John Holdren (2007)
  • David Baltimore (2008)
  • James McCarthy (2009)
  • Peter Agre (2010)
  • Alice S. Huang (2011)
  • Nina Fedoroff (2012)
  • William H. Press (2013)
  • Phillip Allen Sharp (2014)
  • Gerald Fink (2015)
  • Geraldine L. Richmond (2016)
  • Barbara A. Schaal (2017)
  • Susan Hockfield (2018)
  • Margaret Hamburg (2019)
  • Steven Chu (2020)
  • Claire M. Fraser (2021)
  • Gilda Barabino (2022)
  • Keith Yamamoto (2023)
  • Willie E. May (2024)
  • Theresa A. Maldonado (2025)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Presidents of the California Institute of Technology
Early Throop leaders (before Caltech)
  • Charles Keyes (1891–1896)
  • Walter Edwards (1897–1907)
  • James Scherer (1908–1920)
Presidents of Caltech
  • Robert Millikan (1921–1946)
  • Lee DuBridge (1946–1969)
  • Harold Brown (1969–1977)
  • Robert Christy # (1977–1978)
  • Marvin Goldberger (1978–1987)
  • Thomas Everhart (1987–1997)
  • David Baltimore (1997–2006)
  • Jean-Lou Chameau (2006–2013)
  • Edward Stolper # (2013–2014)
  • Thomas Rosenbaum (2014–present)
# denotes an acting or interim president
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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Robert_Millikan&oldid=1334141854" Categories:
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