Dennis Gabor
1900-1979
Inventor of Holography
Nobel Prize in Physics 1971
"for his invention and development of the holographic method"
Personal
Birth Date: June 5, 1900
Birth Place: Budapest, Hungary
Married to Marjorie Louise in 1936
Papers
- "A New Microscopic Principle," Nature, Vol 161, pp.777-778, 1948
- "Microscopy by Reconstructed Wavefronts," Proc. of the Royal Society A, Vol 197, pp.454-487, 1949
- "Innovations: Scientific, Technological and Social," International Journal of Man-Machine Studies, Vol 4, pp.79-84, 1972
and more...
Books
- The Electron Microscope, Its Development, Present Performance, and Future Possibilities, 1946
- Inventing the Future, 1963
- Innovations, 1970
- The Mature Society, 1972
- Beyond the Age of Waste: A Report to the Club of Rome, with U. Colombo, A. King, and R. Galli, 1978
Honours
- Fellow of the Royal Society, 1956.
- Hon. Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1964.
- D.Sc. Univ. of London, 1964, Hon. D.Sc. Univ. of Southampton, 1970, and
Technological University Delft, 1971.
- Thomas Young Medal of Physical Society London, 1967.
- Cristoforo Colombo Prize of Int. Inst. Communications, Genoa, 1967.
- Albert Michelson Medal of The Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, 1968.
- Rumford Medal of the Royal Society, 1968.
- Medal of Honor of the Institution of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers, 1970.
- Commander of the Order of the British Empire, 1970.
- Prix Holweck of the French Physical Society, 1971.
Autobiography
I was born in
Budapest, Hungary, on June 5, 1900, the oldest son of Bertalan Gabor,
director of a mining company, and his wife Adrienne. My life-long love
of physics started suddenly at the age of 15. I could not wait until I
got to the university, I learned the calculus and worked through the
textbook of Chwolson, the largest at that time, in the next two
years. I remember how fascinated I was by Abbe's theory of the
microscope and by Gabriel Lippmann's method of colour photography,
which played such a great part in my work, 30 years later. Also, with
my late brother George, we built up a little laboratory in our home,
where we could repeat most experiments which were modern at that time,
such as wireless X-rays and radioactivity. Yet, when I reached
university age, I opted for engineering instead of physics. Physics
was not yet a profession in Hungary, with a total of half-a-dozen
university chairs - and who could have been presumptious enough to
aspire to one of these?
So I acquired my degrees, (Diploma at the Technische Hochschule
Berlin, 1924, Dr-Ing. in 1927), in electrical engineering, though I
sneaked over from the TH as often as possible to the University of
Berlin, were physics at that time was at its apogee, with Einstein,
Planck, Nernst and v. Laue. Though electrical engineering remained my
profession, my work was almost always in applied physics. My doctorate
work was the development of one of the first high speed cathode ray
oscillographs and in the course of this I made the first iron-shrouded
magnetic electron lens. In 1927 I joined the Siemens & Halske AG where
I made my first of my successful inventions; the high pressure quartz
mercury lamp with superheated vapour and the molybdenum tape seal,
since used in millions of streeet lamps. This was also my first
exercise in serendipity, (the art of looking for something and finding
something else), because I was not after a mercury lamp but after a
cadmium lamp, and that was not a success.
In 1933, when Hitler came to power, I left Germany and after a short
period in Hungary went to England. At that time, in 1934, England was
still in the depths of the depression, and jobs for foreigners were
very difficult. I obtained employment with the British Thomson-Houston
Co., Rugby, on an inventor's agreement. The invention was a gas
discharge tube with a positive characteristic, which could be operated
on the mains. Unfortunately, most of its light emission was in the
short ultraviolet, so that it failed to give good efficiency with the
available fluorescent powders, but at least it gave me a foothold in
the BTH Research Laboratory, where I remained until the end of
1948. The years after the war were the most fruitful. I wrote, among
many others, my first papers on communication theory, I developed a
system of stereoscopic cinematography, and in the last year, 1948 I
carried out the basic experiments in holography, at that time called
"wavefront reconstruction". This again was an exercise in
serendipity. The original objective was an improved electron
microscope, capable of resolving atomic lattices and seeing single
atoms. Three year's work, 1950-53, carried out in collaboration with
the AEI Research Laboratory in Aldermaston, led to some respectable
results, but still far from the goal. We had started 20 years too
early. Only in recent years have certain auxiliary techniques
developed to the point when electron holography could become a
success. On the other hand, optical holography has become a world
success after the invention and introduction of the laser, and
acoustical holography has now also made a promising start.
On January 1, 1949 I joined the Imperial College of Science &
Technology in London, first as a Reader in Electronics, later as
Professor of Applied Electron Physics, until my retirement in
1967. This was a happy time. With my young doctorands as collaborators
I attacked many problems, almost always difficult ones. The first was
the elucidation of Langmuirs Paradox, the inexplicably intense
apparent electron interaction, in low pressure mercury arcs. The
explanation was that the electrons exchanged energy not with one
another, by collisions, but by interaction with an oscillating
boundary layer at the wall of the discharge vessel. We made also a
Wilson cloud chamber, in which the velocity of particles became
measurable by impressing on them a high frequency, critical field,
which produced time marks on the paths, at the points of maximum
ionisation. Other developments were: a holographic microscope, a new
electron-velocity spectroscope an analogue computer which was a
universal, non-linear "learning" predictor, recognizer and simulator
of time series, a flat thin colour television tube, and a new type of
thermionic converter. Theoretical work included communication theory,
plasma theory, magnetron theory and I spent several years on a scheme
of fusion, in which a critical high temperature plasma would have been
established by a 1000 ampere space charge-compensated ion beam, fast
enough to run over the many unstable modes which arise during its
formation. Fortunately the theory showed that at least one unstable
mode always remained, so that no money had to be spent on its
development.
After my retirement in 1967 I remained connected with the Imperial
College as a Senior Research Fellow and I became Staff Scientist of
CBS Laboratories, Stamford, Conn. where I have collaborated with the
President, my life-long friend, Dr. Peter C. Goldmark in many new
schemes of communication and display. This kept me happily occupied as
an inventor, but meanwhile, ever since 1958, I have spent much time on
a new interest; the future of our industrial civilisation. I became
more and more convinced that a serious mismatch has developed between
technology and our social institutions, and that inventive minds ought
to consider social inventions as their first priority. This conviction
has found expression in three books, Inventing the Future, 1963,
Innovations, 1970, and The Mature Society, 1972. Though I still have
much unfinished technological work on my hands, I consider this as my
first priority in my remaining years.
"You can't predict the future, but you can invent it." - Dennis Gabor
Link to Dennis Gabor Foundation
Put together by May Cheng (mayc@cc.gatech.edu) for CS6751
Last modified - 10/21/97