Former
Student Remembers Teller and Fermi with Gratitude
February 2005, page 10
Edward
Teller’s science activities while at the
University of Chicago are described in Physics Today,
August 2004, page 45. A similar article was published
some time earlier (Physics Today, June 2002, page 38)
concerning how effective Enrico Fermi was as a science
adviser, saving some researchers much time by telling
them ways to improve their approach to the problem they
were working on. Neither article mentions the
interactions these great men had with those of us who
were graduate students there at the time.
Teller was approachable by
students, but he was also very busy. A student might
find someone at the blackboard doing a problem under
Teller’s watchful eye while Teller was also
talking to a US Army major from some Department of
Energy group seeking advice on a weapons issue. But the
most striking help we got was indirect. Those of us
taking a class with Maria Goeppert Mayer heard her
advice on how to go about solving a real problem, as
opposed to a class problem. She said, “Save
yourself time by asking Teller to guess the answer. He
has such great physical instincts he can guess the
answer within a few percent and thereby give you a
running start.”
Fermi was a hero to us when,
during a visit to Los Alamos, he used the rudimentary
computer recently installed there to show how
previously unsolvable science problems could be solved.
When he returned to the University of Chicago physics
department after that very productive visit, he posted
a notice to the students saying that he believed that
the computer would become an essential tool for future
physicists. So he proposed to teach a course in
programming over several evenings, and he urged the
graduate students to attend.
The course was in machine language,
of course—a tedious and soon- to-be-abandoned
process as higher languages were devised—but it
clearly demonstrated the basics of how computers
calculated and gave us each a head start on
understanding how to use this new device, which indeed
soon became essential, just as he had forecast.
For a Nobel laureate to offer us that help seemed noble
indeed.
On a later occasion, the chairman
of the physics department told me that his job was very
difficult. The staff consisted of mostly famous
scientists, all of whom had active research projects
under way; each pleaded not to be asked to teach during
the coming term. Fermi, the exception, would wander
into the chairman’s office and say something
like, “I need to ask you a favor. I am a bit weak
in my solid-state physics just now; may I teach it this
fall?”
Fermi’s name is well
established as a scientist of tremendous creativity and
mathematical skill, but to a smaller group he
bequeathed an example of life conducted generously and
with grace.