Maria Goeppert Mayer
DOI: 10.1063/PT.5.031251
Born on 28 June 1906 in Kattowitz, Germany (now Katowice, Poland), Maria Goeppert Mayer was a Nobel Prize–winning physicist who developed a model to explain the packing of protons and neutrons in the atomic nucleus. She is the last woman to receive the physics prize, and one of two to ever receive it (Marie Curie is the other). She studied under multiple Nobel laureates, including Max Born, at the University of Göttingen in Germany and in 1930 earned a doctorate in theoretical physics. She moved to Johns Hopkins University as a volunteer associate and then to Columbia University, where she worked on separating uranium-235 from natural uranium as part of efforts toward an atomic bomb. In 1946 Mayer moved to Chicago and started working at the University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory. Her research focused on the question of why some atomic nuclei are stable while others are not. In 1948 she came up with an explanation: the nuclear shell model
Date in History: 28 June 1906