Tributes to Hans Bethe continue
DOI: 10.1063/1.4797404
Kurt Gottfried wrote, “For almost seven decades, [Hans Bethe’s] wife Rose was his constant companion and closest adviser” (Physics Today, October 2005, page 36
In his 1981 “Reminiscences of the Early Days of Electron Diffraction,” Bethe wrote the following:
On the basis of my thesis, I was invited by P. P. Ewald to give a talk at a small conference on diffraction which he was arranging in Stuttgart in 1928. Apparently my talk pleased him, because a year later he asked me to become his assistant. I had a most enjoyable semester there, with a great deal of research, and close personal contact with Ewald and his family. Out of this I got a wife: Ewald’s daughter, then 12 years old, was already very attractive, but I did not dream of marrying her. Eight years later, I met her again, and in 1939 we got married. So I owe a great deal to electron diffraction. 1
Arnold Sommerfeld had proposed that Bethe make a detailed theory of electron diffraction in a crystal. He recommended as a model the theory by Ewald of the diffraction of x rays, written in 1917. Bethe found that electron diffraction was a great deal simpler. In the x-ray case one has to contend with a vector field. He retained only Ewald’s fundamental idea, the expansion of a spherical wave—that is, the wave scattered by an atom—in terms of plane waves. Thence Bethe developed the theory of electron diffraction in first-order perturbation theory.
References
1. H. A. Bethe, in Fifty Years of Electron Diffraction, P. Goodman, ed., Reidel, Dordrecht, Netherlands (1981), p. 73.
More about the Authors
Durward Cruickshank. (dwj_cruickshank@msn.com) Cheshire, UK .