Walther BotheWalther Bothe was born on January 8, 1891, at Oranienburg, near Berlin.
From 1908 until 1912 he studied physics at the University of Berlin, where
he was a pupil of Max Planck, obtaining his doctorate just before the
outbreak of the 1914-1918 war. From 1913 until 1930 he worked at the Physikalisch-Technische
Reichsanstalt in the same city, becoming a Professor Extraordinary in
the University there. In 1930 he was appointed Professor of Physics, and
Director of the Institute of Physics at the University of Giessen.
In 1932 he was appointed Director of the Institute of Physics at
the University of Heidelberg, in succession to Philipp
Lenard, becoming in 1934 Director of the Institute of Physics at
the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research
in that city. At the end of the Second World War, when this
Institute was taken over for other purposes, Bothe returned to
the Department of Physics in the University, where he taught
until the illness which had handicapped him for several years
compelled him to restrict the scope of his work. He was able,
however, to supervise the work of the Institute of Physics in
the Max Planck Institute and he continued to do this until his
death in Heidelberg on February 8, 1957.
Bothe's scientific work coincided with the opening up of the vast
field of nuclear physics and the results he obtained led to new
outlooks and methods.
He was, during the First World War, taken prisoner by the
Russians and spent a year in captivity in Siberia. This year he
devoted to mathematical studies and to learning the Russian
language; in 1920 he was sent back to Germany.
He then collaborated with H. Geiger at the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt
in Berlin. Together with Geiger, whose influence determined much of his
scientific work, he published, in 1924, his method of coincidence, by
which important discoveries were subsequently made. It is based on the
fact that, when a single particle passes through two or more Geiger counters,
the pulses from each counter are practically coincident in time. The pulse
from each counter is then sent to a coincidence circuit which indicates
pulses that are coincident in time. Arrays of Geiger counters in coincidence
select particles moving in a given direction and the method can be used,
for example, to measure the angular distribution of cosmic rays. Bothe
applied this method to the study of the Compton effect and to other problems
of physics. Together he and Geiger clarified ideas about the small angle
scattering of light rays and Bothe summarized their work on this problem
in his Handbuch article published in 1926 and 1933, establishing
the foundations of modern methods for the analysis of scatter processes.
From 1923 until 1926 Bothe concentrated, especially on experimental and
theoretical work on the corpuscular theory of light. He had, some months
before the discovery of the Compton effect, observed, in a Wilson chamber
filled with hydrogen, the short track of the recoil electrons of X-rays
and he did further work on the direction of the emission of photo electrons.
Together he and Geiger related the Compton effect to the theory of Bohr,
Kramers, and Slater, and the results of their work provided strong support
for the corpuscular theory of light.
In 1927 Bothe further clarified, by means of his coincidence
method, ideas about light quanta in a paper on light quanta and
interference.
In the same year he began to study the transformation of light
elements by bombardment with alpha rays. The resulting fission
products had, until then, been seen by the eye only as
scintillations, but Bothe, in collaboration with Fränz, made
it possible to count them by means of their needle counter.
In 1929, in collaboration with W. Kolhörster, Bothe
introduced a new method for the study of cosmic and ultraviolet
rays by passing them through suitably arranged Geiger counters,
and by this method demonstrated the presence of penetrating
charged particles in the rays, and defined the paths of
individual rays.
For his discovery of the method of coincidence and the discoveries subsequently
made by it, which laid the foundations of nuclear spectroscopy, Bothe
was awarded, jointly with Max Born, the Nobel Prize for Physics for 1954.
In 1930 Bothe, in collaboration with H. Becker, bombarded beryllium of
mass 9 (and also boron and lithium) with alpha rays derived from polonium,
and obtained a new form of radiation that was even more penetrating than
the hardest gamma rays derived from radium, and this led to the discovery
of the neutron, made by Sir James Chadwick in 1932.
At Heidelberg, Bothe was able, after much diffculty, to obtain
the money necessary for building a cyclotron. He worked, during
the 1939-1945 war, on the diffusion theory of neutrons and on
measurements related to these.
In June 1940 he published his Atlas of Cloud-Chamber
Figures.
He was a member of the Academies of Sciences of Heidelberg and
Göttingen, and a Corresponding Member of the Saxon Academy
of Sciences, Leipzig. He was awarded the Max Planck Medal and the
Grand Cross of the Order for Federal Services. In 1952, he was
made a Knight of the Order of Merit for Science and the
Arts.
Bothe's remarkable gifts were not restricted to physics. He had
an astonishing gift of concentration and his habit of carefully
making the best use of his time enabled him to work at great
speed. In the laboratory he was often a difficult and strict
master, at his best in discussions in small classes there, but in
the evenings at home he was, with his Russian wife, very
hospitable and all the difficulties of the day were then
forgotten.
To his hobbies and recreations he gave the same concentration and
intensity of effort that he gave to his scientific work. Chief
among them were music and painting. He went to many musical
concerts and himself played the piano, being especially fond of
Bach and Beethoven. During his holidays he visited the mountains
and did many paintings in oil and water colour. In these his
style was his own. He admired the French impressionists and was
eager and vigorous in his discussions of the merits and demerits
of various artists.
Bothe married Barbara Below of Moscow. Her death preceded his by
some years. They had two children.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Walther Bothe died on February 8, 1957.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1954