JILA named American Physical Society 'physics historic site' on its 50th anniversary

July 11, 2012
Boulder, CO--JILA, the research institution that is a collaboration between the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder, will celebrate its 50th anniversary later this week.
The State Armory Building in Boulder, Colorado was the first home of JILA, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year. (image: JILA)


Boulder, CO--JILA, the research institution that is a collaboration between the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder, will celebrate its 50th anniversary later this week. Events include a formal ceremony on July 13, when JILA is to designated as an American Physical Society (APS) historic site.

The APS citation honors JILA’s achievements in such fields as atomic, molecular and optical physics; astrophysics; biophysics; chemical physics; nanoscience; and precision measurement science.

Established in 1962 as the "Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics," JILA was among the first institutions created as a continuing collaboration between a major government agency and a major university. In the 1960s, JILA focused on measurements and analysis to support the burgeoning U.S. space program, but its mission evolved to include much of the frontiers of physics. Today, JILA performs wide-ranging research in lasers, atomic physics, chemical physics, geophysics, semiconductor technology, astrophysics, and gravitational and optical physics. As a reflection of this broader mandate, in 1995 JILA dropped its old formal name and became what it was always known as internationally: JILA.

Among their advances, JILA scientists have created the first Bose-Einstein and fermionic condensates; performed laser measurements that led to a more accurate value for the speed of light and the redefinition of the meter; and developed frequency combs, laser-based tools for precisely measuring colors of light, with applications in atomic clocks, astronomy and biomedicine.

JILA joins 22 other APS historic sites, including the original NIST headquarters campus in Washington, D.C. The APS Historic Sites Initiative is described at www.aps.org/programs/outreach/history/historicsites/index.cfm.

Renowned scientists expected to attend this week’s anniversary celebration include JILA fellows and Nobel laureates Eric Cornell, John (Jan) Hall and Carl Wieman; founding JILA chair Lewis Branscomb, former director of the National Bureau of Standards (now NIST) and chief scientist at IBM Corp.; and Neal Lane, former presidential science adviser and director of the National Science Foundation.

NIST Director Patrick Gallagher, who is also Undersecretary of Commerce for Standards and Technology, will speak at the July 13 ceremony. Public lectures on JILA history and science are scheduled for June 12. Topics will include personal recollections of Katharine Burr Blodgett, a prominent early American physicist, presented by her niece, Katharine Gebbie, who was JILA’s first female fellow and is now director of NIST’s Physical Measurement Laboratory.

The full schedule for the July 12-13, 2012, events is available online at http://jila.colorado.edu/50th/.


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