Compton Centennial Celebration - Sobotka Lecture

Lee Sobotka Lecture - Arthur Holly Compton’s Influence on WashU Chemistry

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Compton with his research apparatus
Compton with his
research apparatus

Arthur Holly Compton (September 10, 1892 – March 15, 1962)  was an American physicist who conducted groundbreaking research in Eads Hall here at Washington University in the 1920s. In 1922, as head of the Department of Physics, Compton conducted X-ray scattering experiments that demonstrated the particle nature of electromagnetic radiation. At the time, the idea that light had both wave and particle properties was not easily accepted. Through his research, he explained that each ray behaved as a particle, conserving both energy and momentum in collisions with electrons. This provided the first proof that X-rays—formerly thought to be waves—could also behave as particles, confirming a long-standing, but largely ignored prediction by Albert Einstein. Compton’s discovery stimulated the development of quantum mechanics, and was recognized with the Nobel Prize in 1927.

This fall, the Department of Physics will be celebrating the centennial of that research. There will be a display in the lobby at Washington University's Olin Library highlighting him and his research, a lecture by Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek, and the Fall 2022 Saturday Science Lecture Series will be focusing on Compton, his research, and his impact. Please join us in celebrating Compton's achievements.

The Compton Centennial Celebration is sponsored by the William C. Ferguson fund.