Edwin
M. McMillan (18.9.1907 - 7.9.1991)
Edwin Mattison McMillan
was born on 18th September, 1907, at Redondo Beach,
California. He is the son of Dr. Edwin Harbaugh McMillan,
a physician, and his wife, Anne Marie McMillan, née
Mattison, who both came from the State of Maryland and
were both of English and Scottish descent. The boy spent
his early years in Pasadena, California, and obtained his
education in that state.
McMillan attended the California Institute of Technology,
obtaining a B.Sc. degree in 1928, and taking his M.Sc.
degree a year later, then transferring to Princeton University for Ph.D. in
1932. The same year he entered the University
of California at Berkeley as a National Research
Fellow. The thesis he submitted for Ph.D. was in the
field of molecular beams, and the problem he undertook as
a National Research Fellow was the measurement of the
magnetic moment of the proton by a molecular beam method.
After two years on this work and one as a research
associate he became a Staff Member of the Radiation
Laboratory under Professor E.O.
Lawrence, studying nuclear reactions and their
products, and helping in the design and construction of
cyclotrons and other equipment, and a member of the
Faculty in the Department of Physics at Berkely, being
appointed Instructor in 1935, Assistant Professor in 1936,
Associate Professor, 1941, and Professor in 1946.

During the Second World War, McMillan was on leave from
November, 1940, to September, 1945, engaged on national
defence research, serving (1940-1941) in the Radiation
Laboratory, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology; (1941-1942) U. S. Navy Radio
and Sound Laboratory, San Diego; (1942-1945) Manhattan
District, Los Alamos.
It was during 1945 that he had the idea of "phase
stability" which led to the development of the
synchroton and synchro-cyclotron; these machines have
already extended the energies of artificially accelerated
particles into the region of hundreds of MeV and have
made possible many important researches.
McMillan returned to the University of California
Radiation Laboratory as Associate Director from 1954-1958,
when he was raised to Deputy Director and finally
Director, in the same year.
In 1951 he received the 1950 Research Corporation
Scientific Award, and in 1963 he shared the Atoms for
Peace Award with Professor V. I. Veksler.
Professor McMillan is a Fellow of the American Physical
Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a
member of the National Academy of Sciences and the
American Philosophical Society, and from 1954-1958 he
served on the General Advisory Committee to the Atomic
Energy Commission. In 1960 he was appointed to the
Commission on High Energy Physics of the International
Union of Pure and Applied Physics.
An honorary doctorate in science was awarded to him by
the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1961, and by Gustavus
Adolphus College in 1963.
While serving in the Faculty of Physics at Berkeley,
McMillan married Elsie Walford Blumer, a daughter of Dr.
George Blumer, Dean Emeritus of the Yale Medical School.
There are three children of the marriage - Ann Bradford (1943),
David Mattison (1945) and Stephen Walker (1949).
From Nobel Lectures, Chemistry 1942-1962,
Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This
autobiography/biography was written at the time of the
award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated
with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this
document, always state the source as shown above.
Edwin M. McMillan died on
September 7, 1991.
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