Biography:David M. Brink

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Short description: Australian-British nuclear physicist (1930–2021)

David Maurice Brink FRS (20 July 1930, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia – 8 March 2021, Oxford, UK)[1][2] was an Australian-British nuclear physicist. He is known for the Axel-Brink hypothesis.[3]

Education and career

Brink matriculated in 1947 at the University of Tasmania, where he graduated with a B.Sc. in physics in 1951.[4] As a Rhodes Scholar he became a graduate student in physics at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he received his PhD in 1955.[4] His doctoral dissertation Some aspects of the interactions of light with matter[5] was supervised by Maurice Pryce.[6] From 1954 to 1958 Brink was a Rutherford Scholar of the Royal Society.[1] For the academic year 1957–1958 he was an instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). From 1958 to 1993 he was a Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford. At the University of Oxford he was from 1958 to 1988 a university lecturer and from 1988 to 1993 a Moseley Reader.[4] In 1993 he moved to Trento, Italy. There from 1993 to 1998 he was the vice-director of the European Centre for Theoretical Studies in Nuclear Physics (under the auspices of the European Centre of Technology), as well as, at the University of Trento a professor of the history of physics.[1][4]

Brink was a visiting scientist at Copenhagen's Niels Bohr Institute in 1964. He has been a visiting professor at the Institut de physique nucléaire d'Orsay (1969 and 1981–1982), the University of British Columbia (1975), the Technical University of Munich (1982), the University of Trento (1988), the University of Catania (1988), and Michigan State University (1988–1989).[4]

As a theoretical physicist he did important research on "the study of nuclear structure via the shell model and effective interactions, and nuclear reactions via statistical methods."[2]

He was interested in the physics of giant resonances and developed semi classical methods for heavy ion reactions which he used to explain the selectivity in the population of high angular momentum states in heavy ion transfer reactions and neutron transfer to bound states. His book Angular momentum (with G.R. Satchler) is a classic introduction to the topic.
For several years David had a very productive collaboration with Dominique Vautherin, Marcel Vénéroni and their colleagues at Orsay on the use of Skyrme's effective interaction for Hartree-Fock calculations and, later, on the semi classical theory of collective motion in nuclei.[1]

He was elected in 1981 a Fellow of the Royal Society.[7] He received in 1982 the Rutherford Medal of the Institute of Physics. He was made in 1992 a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala. In 2006 he received the Lise Meitner Prize "for his many contributions to the theory of nuclear structure and nuclear reactions over several decades, including his seminal work on the theory of nuclear masses using Skyrme effective interactions, nuclear giant resonances, clustering in nuclei and quantum and semi-classical theories of heavy-ion scattering and reactions."[8]

Selected publications

Articles

Books

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Obituary: David Brink FRS". 17 March 2021. https://www.physics.ox.ac.uk/news/obituary-david-brink-frs. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Bonaccorso, Angela (2021). "In Memoriam: David M. Brink (1930–2021)". Nuclear Physics News 31 (3): 39. doi:10.1080/10619127.2021.1954452. Bibcode2021NPNew..31...39B. 
  3. Brink, D. M.. ""Giant resonances in excited nuclei." In: Talk presented at the workshop on chaos and collectivity in many body systems at the PMIPKS, Dresden, March 5-8. 2008". https://www.mpipks-dresden.mpg.de/~ccm08/Abstract/Brink.pdf.  list of workshop's invited speakers Peter Axel (1923–1983), a professor of physics at the University of Illinois, worked independently of D. M. Brink. In Memoriam: Peter Axel, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 "CV David Brink - School of Physics & Astronomy". http://www.physics.gla.ac.uk/~ianm/epsnpb/organization/activities/meitner/2006/meitner_2006.html. 
  5. Brink, D. M. (1955). Thesis. Some aspects of the interactions of light with matter. Oxford University Research Archive (Thesis).
  6. "David M. Brink". https://academictree.org/physics/peopleinfo.php?pid=838829. 
  7. Sukumar, C. V.; Bonaccorso, A. (2022). "David Maurice Brink. 20 July 1930 — 8 March 2021". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 73: 65–83. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2022.0020. 
  8. "Past winners previous years". https://www.eps.org/page/NPD_prizes_LMeitner. 
  9. Danos, Michael (1963). "Review of Angular Momentum by D. M. Brink and G. M. Satchler". Physics Today 16 (6): 80–81. doi:10.1063/1.3050996. Bibcode1963PhT....16f..80B. 
  10. Johnson, R. C.; Oi, M. (2010). "Review of Nuclear Superfluidity. Pairing in Finite Systems, by D.M. Brink and R.A. Broglia". Contemporary Physics 51: 91–92. doi:10.1080/00107510902921097.