Glen Rebka

Glen Anderson Rebka, Jr. (September 19, 1931, Cincinnati  January 13, 2015, Laramie) was an American physicist.[1]

Biography

Rebka attained a doctorate 1961 at Harvard, where he began study in 1953. Starting from 1961 he was at Yale University and starting from 1970 at the University of Wyoming, where he was from 1983 to 1991 department head of the physics faculty and is since 1997 professor emeritus. In addition to his academic career he did much work as an experimental elementary-particle physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory. At the University of Wyoming he built up the astrophysics faculty.

In 1960 Robert Pound carried out together with his assistant Glen Rebka an experiment, the Pound–Rebka experiment, using the Mössbauer effect to measure the gravitational redshift of the radiation from a gamma source in the gravitation field of planet Earth.[2][3] Pound and Rebka used at Harvard University the Jefferson tower, which is only 22.6 meters tall. The work was part of Rebka's thesis with Pound as thesis advisor.

Pound and Rebka received in 1965 the Eddington medal of the Royal Astronomical Society.[4]

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References

  1. Staff, Physics Today (16 January 2015). "Glen Rebka". Physics Today. doi:10.1063/PT.5.6123.
  2. R. V. Pound and G. A. Rebka, Jr.: Apparent Weight of Photons. In: Physical Review Letters. Vol. 4, 1. April 1960, pp. 337–341
  3. Robert V. Pound: Weighing Photons. In: Physics in Perspective. Vol. 2, 2000, pp. 224–268, and Vol. 3, 2001, pp. 4–51
  4. Presidential Address on the Award of the Eddington Medal to Professor R. V. Pound and Dr. G. A. Rebka. In: Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society. Vol. 6, pp. 123–124
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