HALL OF FAME / inventor profile

Ernest Orlando Lawrence
Born Aug 8 1901 - Died Aug 27 1958

Method and Apparatus for the Acceleration of Ions
Cyclotron
Patent Number(s) 1,948,384

Inducted 1982


Ernest Orlando Lawrence invented the cyclotron, a device that greatly increased the speed with which projectiles could be hurled at atomic nuclei.

Invention Impact

Without it, and related instruments, most of the advancements in nuclear physics made in the last 50 years could not have occurred.

Inventor Bio

Born in Canton, South Dakota, Lawrence graduated from the University of South Dakota in 1922 then went to Yale University, where he obtained his Ph.D. in physics in 1925. In 1927 he joined the faculty of the University of California. Lawrence built his first cyclotron in 1930. Unlike other devices, which attempted to give charged particles one tremendous push, Lawrence's device moved protons in a widening spiral, imparting more energy to them with each spin, until they finally shot out of the instrument.

In 1939 Lawrence was rewarded for his work with the Nobel Prize in physics.

© 2002 National Inventors Hall of Fame