Raymond (Ray) Davis, Jr. (October 14, 1914 – May 31, 2006) was an American
chemist,
physicist, and
Nobel Prize in Physics laureate.
Early life and education
Davis was born in
Washington, D.C., where his father was a
photographer for the
National Bureau of Standards. He spent several years as a choirboy to please his mother, although he could not carry a tune. He enjoyed attending the concerts at the Watergate before air traffic was loud enough to drown out the music. His brother Warren, 14 months younger than he, was his constant companion in boyhood. He graduated in
chemistry from the
University of Maryland in 1938. He also received a master's degree from that school and a Ph.D. from
Yale University in
physical chemistry in 1942.
Career
Davis spent most of the war years at
Dugway Proving Ground,
Utah observing the results of chemical weapons tests and exploring the
Great Salt Lake basin for evidence of its predecessor,
Lake Bonneville.
Upon his discharge from the army in 1946, Davis went to work at
Monsanto's Mound Laboratory, in
Miamisburg, Ohio, doing applied
radiochemistry of interest to the
United States Atomic Energy Commission. In 1948, he joined
Brookhaven National Laboratory, which was dedicated to finding peaceful uses for
nuclear power.
Davis reports that he was asked "to find something interesting to work on," and dedicated his career to the study of
neutrinos, particles which had been predicted to explain the process of
beta decay, but...
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