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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
5 Name
Chien-Shiung Wu

Wikipedia

 
Chien-Shiung Wu (吳健雄 Pinyin: W? Ji?nx?ong) (May 31, 1912–February 16, 1997) was a female Chinese American physicist with an expertise in radioactivity. She worked on the Manhattan Project (to enrich the uranium fuel) and disproved the conservation of parity. Her nicknames to many scientists are "First Lady of Physics" and "Madame Marie Curie|Curie of China".



Although her ancestral family home is Taicang (in Jiangsu Province), Wu was born in Shanghai. Her father, Wu Zhongyi (吳仲裔), was a proponent of gender equality and founded Mingde Women's Vocational Continuing School (明德女子職業補習學校), where Chien-Shiung Wu spent her elementary education until she left her hometown at eleven to the Suzhou Women's Normal School No. 2. Her mother was Fan Fuhua (樊復華).

She was admitted to the National Central University in 1929. According to the regulation of the time, normal school students entering universities needed to serve as teachers for one year, so in 1929 she went to teach in the Public School of China (中國公學) founded by Hu Shi in Shanghai. From 1930 to 1934, she attended the Physics Department of Nanjing Central University (now Nanjing University). For two years after her graduation, she worked with another female researcher, Jing Weijin (靜薇進), in the university.



In 1936, she went to the United States|USA with a female friend, Dong Ruofen (董若芬), a chemist from Taicang. Wu studied at the University of California, Berkeley, receiving her Ph.D in 1940. She married Luke Chia-Liu Yuan (袁家騮), also a physicist, two years later. They had a son, Vincent (袁緯承), who became a physicist as well. The family moved to the East Coast, where Wu taught at Smith College, Princeton University, and Columbia University (1957).

She assisted Tsung-Dao Lee personally in his parity laws development (with Chen Ning Yang) by providing him with a possible test method for beta decay in 1956 that worked successfully. Some consider this very instrumental in the creation of the laws, but she was not nominated for the Nobel Prize. Her book Beta Decay (1965) is still a standard reference for nuclear physicists.

She later conducted researches in molecular changes in the deformation of hemoglobins that cause sickle-cell anemia.

Wu set precedents for womankind on several occasions. She was:
  • the first female instructor in the Physics Department of Princeton University;

  • the first woman with a Princeton honorary doctorate;

  • the first female President of the American Physical Society (1975, through an election).


Wu won the National Medal of Science in 1975, and the first Wolf Prize in Physics in 1978.



Chinese Academy of Sciences named Asteroid 2752 after her in 1990: the Wu Jianxiong Xing. In 1995, four Chinese/Taiwanese Nobelists—Tsung-Dao Lee, Chen Ning Yang, Samuel C. C. Ting, and Yuan T. Lee—founded the Wu Chien-Shiung Education Foundation in Taiwan for the purposes of providing scholarships to young aspiring scientists.

She died two years later at the age of 84 of a stroke in Manhattan, New York City, USA. Her cremated ash was buried in Mingde Senior High School (successor of Mingde Women's School). Her husband (died February 2003) chose to be buried beside her. Her Headstone|tombstone was inscribed with calligraphy by Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen Ning Yang (for Wu), and Samuel Ting and Yuan T. Lee (for Yuan).

In June 1, 2002, a bronze statue of Wu was erected in the courtyard of Mingde High.



Chien-Shiung Wu's generation name, Chien ("Capable"), is like her brothers', and not a separate name for females (see Chinese name). In addition, her parent-given name, Shiung, means "Hero" or "Conqueror". So, with her given name, many Chinese who first hear of her mistake her as a male.



  • Nobel Prize controversies




  • http://www.wcs.org.tw The Foundation (bilingual)

  • http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/Phase2/Wu,_Chien_Shiung@841234567.html UCLA Physics

  • http://www.columbia.edu/cu/record/archives/vol22/vol22_iss15/record2215.16.html Eulogy-biography (Columbia)

  • http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Parity/people/Wu.html A large black/white photo and a mini-bio

  • http://www.oz.net/~roxanam/W.htm The list of asteroid names: including that named after Wu


Category:1912 births|Wu, Chien-Shiung
Category:1997 deaths|Wu, Chien-Shiung
Category:Chinese American scientists|Wu, Chien-Shiung
Category:Physicists|Wu, Chien-Shiung
Category:Women physicists|Wu, Chien-Shiung
Category:People associated with Columbia University|Wu, Chien-Shiung
Category:Manhattan Project|Wu, Chien-Shiung
zh:吴健雄
nl:Wu Chien-Shiung

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Chien-Shiung Wu".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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