Get Four
Free Issues

Subscribe to BW
Customer Service


Full Table of Contents
Cover Story
Special Report -- The Best Global Brands
Up Front
The Great Innovators
Readers Report
Corrections & Clarifications
Books
Technology & You
Economic Viewpoint
Economic Trends



Business Outlook
News: Analysis & Commentary
In Biz This Week
Asian Business
European Business
International Outlook
Entertainment
Sports Biz
Social Issues
Finance
Developments to Watch
Science & Technology
Industrial Management
The Corporation
Information Technology
Workplace
Personal Business
Footnotes
The Barker Portfolio
Inside Wall Street
Figures Of The Week
Editorials




AUGUST 2, 2004
THE GREAT INNOVATORS

Charles H. Townes: The Light Fantastic
Lasers have transformed medicine, computers, telecom, and electronics

As part of its anniversary celebration, BusinessWeek is presenting a series of weekly profiles of the greatest innovators of the past 75 years. Some made their mark in science or technology; others in management, finance, marketing, or government. In late September, 2004, BusinessWeek will publish a special commemorative issue on Innovation.


Charles H. Townes
The story of the laser begins with some eye trouble. It was 1937, and Charles H. Townes, a first-year grad student at California Institute of Technology, faced a tough decision: pursue theoretical physics, a field then electrified by Einstein's ideas, or go into experimental physics, where he would build machines to test theories.

"My eyes were bothering me," Townes recalled in a recent phone interview. "A doctor said it was all the reading I was doing." Working with instruments instead of formulas, he figured, would save his sight. That choice took him down a path others had overlooked -- one that led to devices that emit brilliant beams of light. "Initially, many theoreticians doubted this was possible," he says, including Niels Bohr and computer pioneer John von Neumann. Townes patented the laser in 1959 and won a Nobel prize five years later.

He was educated in the presence of greatness. At CalTech, Townes rubbed shoulders with J. Robert Oppenheimer, Nobel laureate Linus Pauling, and a half-dozen other future Nobel winners. With a newly minted PhD, he toiled during the war years at Bell Labs beside transistor co-inventors William B. Shockley and Walter H. Brattain, developing early radar systems.

Townes joined Columbia University's faculty in 1948 to research how microwaves might help reveal the structure of molecules. All he really sought was a new scientific tool, but what he invented revolutionized science. In 1951 he realized that stimulating molecules with microwaves -- and amplifying the effect in a special chamber -- could trigger a chain reaction leading to the emission of an unusually pure, concentrated beam of radiation. Three years later, Townes and his grad students fired up a machine that produced the desired beam. They called it a MASER, for microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. Townes shared the 1964 Nobel for it with two Soviet scientists who were doing related research.

In 1958, Townes and his brother-in-law, Arthur L. Schawlow, adapted his theory to show that visible light could replace microwaves. But the first lasers were built by others, and Townes's laser patent was later challenged by an ex-student, Gordon Gould.

At 89, Townes is still doing research -- and his eyes are just fine. In recent years he has focused on astronomy, using lasers to help combine images from distant telescopes, effectively creating a huge virtual lens. Although the killer applications didn't materialize for many years, his lasers have transformed medicine, telecommunications, consumer electronics, and computing, and they're part of the emerging toolkit for nanotech. Laser surgery, Townes notes, has even saved the sight of some of his friends.



By Adam Aston
 BW MALL   SPONSORED LINKS
    Buy a link now!

    Get BusinessWeek directly on your desktop with our RSS feeds.XML

    Add BusinessWeek news to your Web site with our headline feed.

    Click to buy an e-print or reprint of a BusinessWeek or BusinessWeek Online story or video.

    To subscribe online to BusinessWeek magazine, please click here.

    Learn more, go to the BusinessWeekOnline home page

    Back to Top



      MARKET INFO
    DJIA 0 0.00
    S&P 500 0 0.00
    Nasdaq 0 0.00

    Portfolio Service Update

    Stock Lookup

    Enter name or ticker



    Media Kit | Special Sections | MarketPlace | Knowledge Centers
    Bloomberg L.P.