Kenneth Ross MacKenzie Scientist

Kenneth Ross MacKenzie (June 15, 1912 – July 4, 2002) together with Dale R. Corson and Emilio Segrè, synthesized the element astatine, in 1940. MacKenzie received his PhD under Ernest Lawrence at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Lawrence, MacKenzie, and their colleagues devised the first cyclotron. He was a professor of physics at UCLA, where he and Reg Richardson built UCLA's first cyclotron and later a bevatron. MacKenzie devised MacKenzie buckets which are plasma sources created by lining vacuum chamber walls with permanent magnets of alternating polarity to suppress plasma electron losses, that are widely used to this day. He later traveled around the world, helping to troubleshoot various country's cyclotron problems. Later in life, he studied plasma physics and dark matter.

Personal facts

Birth dateJune 15, 1912
Birth place
Portland Oregon , United States , Oregon
Nationality
United States
Date of deathJuly 03, 2002
Place of death
California , Los Angeles , United States
Education
University of California Berkeley
University of British Columbia
Known for
Astatine

Search

Scientist

doctoral advisor
Field of study
Nuclear physics

Kenneth Ross MacKenzie on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/senate/inmemoriam/KennethRossMacKenzie.htm