Benjamin W. Lee
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- This is a Korean name; the family name is Lee.
Benjamin W. Lee (Korean language: 이휘소, Lee Whi-so) (1935 - June 16, 1977) was a Korean American theoretical physicist, born in Seoul, Korea. Lee was a professor of physics at the University of Chicago, and head of the theoretical physics department at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. He graduated from Miami University and received a masters degree from the University of Pittsburgh, and his Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. On June 16, 1977, he was killed in a car accident not far from Kewanee, Illinois. He was regarded by his peers as a world-class elementary particle physicist at the time of his sudden death. He was particularly well regarded by Steven Weinberg, a Nobel Laureate.
Lee studied symmetry principles and weak interactions. The Benjamin W. Lee Prize is named in his honor.[citation needed] The prize is administered by the Department of Physics and Astronomy of Stony Brook University and comes with a relatively modest monetary award. Among its receipients are Sultan Catto and Hyunoo Shim.
[edit] Mysterious Death & Conspiracy
Prior to his car accident, Lee was exclusively invited to Korea by then President, Park Chung Hee. Coincidently, at the time, South Korean government was in pursuit of the development of nuclear warhead capabilities. In Korea, many people regard Lee's death as a big conspiracy executed by America's various clandestine agencies, namely the CIA for obvious reasons.
His death, has produced fictional books, and films in Korea. Moo-goong-wha kochi pi-ut sum ni da ('The Flower Blossoms') was a novel that somewhat followed the life of Lee.
[edit] External links
- In Memoriam Benjamin W. Lee (Fermilab)
- Benjamin W. Lee, Benjamin W. Lee by Chris Quigg and Steven Weinberg (Physics Today, Sep 1977)
- Benjamin Lee comments on HEP discoveries (May 13, 1976)
- Ben Lee Memorial International Conference at Fermi Lab
- Benjamin Whiso Lee: Korea's Oppenheimer? by Moo-Young Han
- A Model of Leptons (an APS News interview with Steven Weinberg)
- Gerardus 't Hooft – Autobiography (for The Nobel Prize in Physics 1999)
- The Dilemma of Attribution by David Politzer for the Nobel Lecture in 2004
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | 1935 births | 1977 deaths | American physicists | Korean Americans | Miami University alumni | People from Pittsburgh | University of Chicago faculty | University of Pennsylvania alumni | University of Pittsburgh | Particle physicists | American road accident victims | Physicist stubs | Korean people stubs