Mildred Allen (physicist)

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Mildred Allen
Born(1894-03-25)March 25, 1894
DiedNovember 4, 1990(1990-11-04) (aged 96)
NationalityUnited States
Alma materVassar College,
Clark University
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsMount Holyoke College
ThesisOn thermal emission and evaporation from water (1922)
Doctoral advisorArthur Gordon Webster

Mildred Allen (March 25, 1894 – November 4, 1990) was an American physicist.

Biography[]

Early life and education[]

Mildred Allen was born in Sharon, Massachusetts to MIT professor C. Frank Allen and Caroline Hadley Allen. She had one younger sister, Margaret Allen Anderson.

Allen graduated from Vassar College in 1916 with Phi Beta Kappa honors. She completed her doctoral studies in physics in 1922 at Clark University with Arthur Gordon Webster, with thesis research done at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Career[]

During the 1920s and early 1930s, Allen taught at Mount Holyoke, Wellesley and Oberlin Colleges and undertook post-doctoral work at the University of Chicago and at Yale University. She began working with William Francis Gray Swann at Yale and continued work under his direction with the Bartol Research Foundation between 1927 and 1930. She also did research at Harvard University before becoming a professor at Mount Holyoke, where she taught until her retirement in 1959.

For nearly 20 years, starting in the early 1960s, Allen collaborated with Erwin Saxl, an industrial physicist living in Harvard, Massachusetts, on experiments with a torsion pendulum. Allen and Saxl reported anomalous changes in the period of a torsion pendulum during a solar eclipse in 1970 and hypothesized that “gravitational theory needs to be modified”.[2][3] Their measurements, and similar anomalies earlier observed by Allais using a paraconical pendulum, have not been accepted by the physics community as in need of unconventional explanation, and subsequent experiments have not succeeded in reproducing the results.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ "Mildred Allen, 96, Taught at Mount Holyoke". Boston Globe. 1990-11-16. NewsBank ID 0EADDF1742E1FD07.
  2. ^ Saxl, Erwin J.; Allen, Mildred (1971), "1970 Solar Eclipse as "Seen" by a Torsion Pendulum", Physical Review D, 3 (4): 823–825, Bibcode:1971PhRvD...3..823S, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.3.823
  3. ^ Schilling, Govert (27 November 2004), "Shadow over gravity", New Scientist, 184: 28–31
  4. ^ Van Flandern, T.; Yang, X. S. (2003), "Allais gravity and pendulum effects during solar eclipses explained", Physical Review D, 67 (2): 022002, Bibcode:2003PhRvD..67b2002V, doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.67.022002

External links[]

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