Tsung-Dao Lee

Birthday November 24, 1926

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Shanghai, Republic of China

Age 97 years old

Nationality China

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1915

He is the third-youngest Nobel laureate in sciences in history after William L. Bragg (who won the prize at 25 with his father William H. Bragg in 1915) and Werner Heisenberg (who won in 1932 also at 30).

Lee and Yang were the first Chinese laureates.

1926

Tsung-Dao Lee (born November 24, 1926) is a Chinese-American physicist, known for his work on parity violation, the Lee–Yang theorem, particle physics, relativistic heavy ion (RHIC) physics, nontopological solitons, and soliton stars.

1943

Nevertheless, in 1943, Lee directly applied to and was admitted by the National Che Kiang University (now Zhejiang University).

Initially, Lee registered as a student in the Department of Chemical Engineering.

Very quickly, Lee's talent was discovered and his interest in physics grew rapidly.

Several physics professors, including Shu Xingbei and Wang Ganchang, largely guided Lee, and he soon transferred into the Department of Physics of National Che Kiang University, where he studied in 1943–1944.

1945

However, again disrupted by a further Japanese invasion, Lee continued at the National Southwestern Associated University in Kunming the next year in 1945, where he studied with Professor Wu Ta-You.

Professor Wu nominated Lee for a Chinese government fellowship for graduate study in the US.

1946

In 1946, Lee went to the University of Chicago and was selected by Professor Enrico Fermi to become his PhD student.

1950

Lee's mother Chang and brother Robert C. T. moved to Taiwan in the 1950s.

Lee received his secondary education in Shanghai (High School Affiliated to Soochow University, 東吳大學附屬中學) and Jiangxi (Jiangxi Joint High School, 江西聯合中學).

Due to the Second Sino-Japanese war, Lee's high school education was interrupted, thus he did not obtain his secondary diploma.

Lee received his PhD under Fermi in 1950 for his research work Hydrogen Content of White Dwarf Stars.

Lee served as research associate and lecturer in physics at the University of California at Berkeley from 1950 to 1951.

1953

He was a university professor emeritus at Columbia University in New York City, where he taught from 1953 until his retirement in 2012.

In 1953, Lee joined Columbia University, where he remained until retirement.

His first work at Columbia was on a solvable model of quantum field theory better known as the Lee model.

Soon, his focus turned to particle physics and the developing puzzle of K meson decays.

1956

Lee realized in early 1956 that the key to the puzzle was parity non-conservation.

At Lee's suggestion, the first experimental test was on hyperion decay by the Steinberger group.

At that time, the experimental result gave only an indication of a 2 standard deviation effect of possible parity violation.

Encouraged by this feasibility study, Lee made a systematic study of possible Time reversal (T), Parity (P), Charge Conjugation (C), and CP violations in weak interactions with collaborators, including C. N. Yang.

1957

In 1957, at the age of 30, Lee won the Nobel Prize in Physics with Chen Ning Yang for their work on the violation of the parity law in weak interactions, which Chien-Shiung Wu experimentally proved from 1956 to 1957, with her well known Wu experiment.

Lee remains the youngest Nobel laureate in the science fields after World War II.

After the definitive experimental confirmation by Chien-Shiung Wu and her assistants that showed that parity was not conserved, Lee and Yang were awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Unfortunately Wu was not awarded the Nobel prize, which is considered one of the largest controversies in Nobel committee history.

1960

In the early 1960s, Lee and collaborators initiated the important field of high-energy neutrino physics.

1962

Since he became a naturalized American citizen in 1962, Lee is also the youngest American ever to have won a Nobel Prize.

Lee was born in Shanghai, China, with his ancestral home in nearby Suzhou.

His father Chun-kang Lee, one of the first graduates of the University of Nanking, was a chemical industrialist and merchant who was involved in China's early development of modern synthesized fertilizer.

Lee's grandfather Chong-tan Lee was the first Chinese Methodist Episcopal senior pastor of St. John's Church in Suzhou (蘇州聖約翰堂).

Lee has four brothers and one sister.

Educator Robert C.T. Lee is one of T. D.'s brothers.

1964

In 1964, Lee, with M. Nauenberg, analyzed the divergences connected with particles of zero rest mass, and described a general method known as the KLN theorem for dealing with these divergences, which still plays an important role in contemporary work in QCD, with its massless, self-interacting gluons.

1974

In 1974–75, Lee published several papers on "A New Form of Matter in High Density", which led to the modern field of RHIC physics, now dominating the entire high-energy nuclear physics field.

Besides particle physics, Lee has been active in statistical mechanics, astrophysics, hydrodynamics, many body system, solid state, lattice QCD.

1975

Beginning in 1975, Lee and collaborators established the field of non-topological solitons, which led to his work on soliton stars and black holes throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

1983

In 1983, Lee wrote a paper entitled, "Can Time Be a Discrete Dynamical Variable?"; which led to a series of publications by Lee and collaborators on the formulation of fundamental physics in terms of difference equations, but with exact invariance under continuous groups of translational and rotational transformations.

1997

From 1997 to 2003, Lee was director of the RIKEN-BNL Research Center (now director emeritus), which together with other researchers from Columbia, completed a 1 teraflops supercomputer QCDSP for lattice QCD in 1998 and a 10 teraflops QCDOC machine in 2001.