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October 8,
2002
Secretary
of Energy Spencer Abraham, Office of Science
Director Raymond Orbach Salute Raymond Davis,
Jr., Recipient of 2002 Nobel Prize
WASHINGTON, DC - Secretary of Energy Spencer
Abraham lauded Raymond Davis, Jr., a retired
chemist at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven
Laboratory, for receiving the 2002 Nobel Prize
in Physics. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
made the announcement earlier this morning.
Dr. Davis, who worked in the Brookhaven Laboratory's
chemistry department from 1948 until his retirement
in 1984, was awarded the Nobel Prize for detecting
solar neutrinos, ghostlike particles produced
in the nuclear reactions that power the sun.
DOE and its predecessor agencies have supported
more than 70 Nobel Prize winners.
Dr. Davis shares the prize with Masatoshi Koshiba
of Japan and Riccardo Giacconi of the United
States.
"I take special pleasure in congratulating
Dr. Davis on this richly deserved honor,"
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham said. "Dr.
Davis did the pivotal work for which he has
been awarded the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics
at the Energy Department's Brookhaven National
Laboratory."
"Indeed, the timing of Dr. Davis' honor
could hardly be more poignant given the Department
of Energy is celebrating its 25th anniversary,
a full quarter century in dedicated service
to its missions of energy security, national
security, environmental restoration and science."
"This Nobel Prize is testimony not only
to Dr. Davis' genius," Abraham concluded,
"but also to the high quality of the scientific
work that the Department of Energy has underwritten
throughout its history."
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded
Dr. Davis the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics "for
pioneering contributions to astrophysics, in
particular the detection of cosmic neutrinos."
Neutrinos offer a unique view of the sun's inner
workings because they are produced in ts heart
by the same process that causes it to shine
- nuclear fusion. Davis' experiments detected
these neutrinos, confirming that the sun is
powered by nuclear fusion. The same experiments,
however, showed that only one third of the solar
neutrinos predicted by theory were detected,
opening up a new area of physics not predicted
by the Standard Model.
"Dr. Davis conducted a brilliant experiment
with profound insights that led to further investigations
of great important," said Dr. Raymond L.
Orbach, Director of the Office of Science, which
manages Brookhaven and 9 other national laboratories
for the Energy Department.
"The Department of Energy and its Office
of Science are very proud of our association
with Dr. Davis," Dr. Orbach said. "We
extend our heartfelt congratulations to Dr.
Davis, the latest in a remarkable constellation
of Nobel laureates whose work has been supported
by the Energy Department."
For additional information about Dr. Raymond
Davis, Jr., his discovery of solar neutrinos
and the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics, please
see the Nobel Prize web site http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/2002/press.html
and the Energy Department's Brookhaven National
Laboratory web site http://www.bnl.gov.
Media Contact: Jill Schroeder Vieth, 202/586-4940
Number: PR-02-215
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