Lorella Jones
Lorella M. Jones | |
---|---|
Born |
February 22, 1943 Toronto, Ontario |
Died |
February 9, 1995 51) Champaign, Illinois | (aged
Fields | Particle physics |
Institutions | Computer-based Education Research Laboratory |
Alma mater | Harvard University, California Institute of Technology |
Known for | Solving the anharmonic Grassmann oscillator |
Lorella Margaret Jones (February 22, 1943 – February 9, 1995) was a professor of physics and director of the Computer-based Education Research Laboratory (CERL) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She was particularly interested in the application of computers to physics education and championed the cause of women in physics.[1][2] She wrote an essay entitled "Intellectual Contributions of Women in Physics" in Women of Science: Righting the Record.[3]
She studied at Harvard, concentrating on mathematics, and graduated magna cum laude in 1964. From Harvard she moved on to Caltech receiving an M.Sc. in 1966 and Ph.D. in 1968. She became an associate professor of physics at Illinois in 1974, later becoming a full professor. Her research was in high-energy physics, particularly the force binding nuclear particles to quarks. She took a sabbatical in 1981-2 to work at CERN, becoming a fellow of the American Physical Society in the division of particles and fields in 1982. She became director of the university’s Education Research Laboratory, remaining at the University of Illinois for her whole career and publishing a total of sixty four papers based on her research.[1]
External links
References
- 1 2 "Harvard-Radcliffe Class of 1964, Obituaries". Retrieved 2014-05-13.
- ↑ Delbourgo, Robert; Laura H. Greene. "Lorella M. Jones". Physics Illinois (website). access date 13/5/2014
- ↑ Kass-Simon, G. (1999). Women of Science: Righting the Record ([Nachdr] ed.). Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana Univ. Press. p. 387. ISBN 978-0-253-20813-2.