Covering the life and 60-year career of Professor Benjamin Lax (1915-2015), Benjamin Lax – Interviews on a Life in Physics at MIT: Understanding and Exploiting the Effects of Magnetic Fields on Matter, interviews conducted by Dr. Donald T. Stevenson, was published by CRC Press on December 10. 2019. As a preeminent physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Lax played major roles in the development and applications of solid state and plasma physics.
In an extensive series of autobiographical interviews, Lax describes the challenges he overcame, the opportunities he embraced and the many outstanding research physicists he recruited, mentored and interacted with. He includes both personal and professional reminiscences.
Lax begins with his earliest memories of his childhood in Hungary. He recalls the immigration of his family to America and his education in New York City. He describes his Army service as a Radar Officer at the MIT Radiation Laboratory during World War II. He covers his graduate education in physics at MIT, and his building up the semiconductor and ferrite research groups at MIT Lincoln Laboratory in the 1950s. Lax describes the origins and accomplishments of the MIT Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory, of which he was the founding Director, and recalls his tenure as professor in the MIT physics department.
This book provides a valuable insight into a 60-year career in physics at one of the world’s major research universities, MIT. It explores the organization, funding and conduct of solid state physics research in the second half of the twentieth century. This book is accompanied by an on-line supplement that includes a complete bibliography of Lax’s publications.
Some readers may remember that Lax was an Associate Editor of the Microwave Journal between 1959 to 1974, as well as a frequent contributor.
Dr. Donald T. Stevenson (Interviewer), a close colleague and friend of Lax’s throughout their long careers at MIT, joined MIT Lincoln Laboratory in 1951, the same year as Lax. He retired from MIT in 1988 as assistant director of the Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory. Dr. Marion B. Reine (Editor) was an MIT graduate student of Lax’s. He did his thesis research at the Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory. Dr. Roshan L. Aggarwal (Editor) joined the MIT Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory in 1965, where he worked closely with Lax on the optical properties of semiconductors. He retired from MIT Lincoln Laboratory in 2016 after 51 years of research and teaching at MIT.