Clinton J. Davisson

Clinton J.
Davisson
Year
1931
Subject
Physics
Award
Cresson
Affiliation
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Citation
For the scattering and diffraction of electrons by crystals (with Lester H. Germer).

Clinton Joseph Davisson was born in 1881 in Bloomington, Illinois. Davisson received his doctorate from Princeton University and spent most of his career at the Bell Telephone Laboratories. He began his research there on the emissions of electrons from a metal in the presence of heat and later helped develop the electron microscope.

In 1927, Dr. Davisson and Lester H. Germer found that a beam of electrons, when reflected from a metallic crystal, shows diffraction patterns similar to those of X-rays and other electromagnetic waves. This discovery verified quantum mechanics' understanding of the dual nature of subatomic particles and proved to be useful in the study of nuclear, atomic, and molecular structure. He shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1937 with George P. Thomson of England for discovering that electrons can be diffracted like light waves, thus verifying the thesis of Louis de Broglie that electrons behave both as waves and as particles.

Information as of 1931