Richard E. Taylor 1929-2018
Professional and Biographical Information
1950 BSc, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
1952 MSc, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
1958 - 1961 Boursier, Laboratoire de l'Accélérateur Linéare, Orsay, France
1961 - 1962 Physicist, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California
1962 PhD from Stanford, with thesis "Positive pion production by polarized bremsstrahlung"
1962 - 1968 Experimental Physicist, SLAC, Stanford
1968-1970 Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford
1970-2003 Professor, SLAC, Stanford
1975 Appears as Sir Desmond Murgatroyd, 16th Baronet, Archbishop in Stanford production of Gilbert & Sullivan's Ruddigore
1978 SLAC-Yale experiment (SLAC-E-122) led by Prescott & Taylor discovers a parity-violating asymmetry predicted by the Weinberg-Salam unified gauge theory. It also provides the first experimental confirmation of parity-violation in a "neutral current" interaction.
1981-1982 at DESY in Hamburg
1982 - 1986 Associate Director, SLAC Research Division
1990 Nobel Prize in PHysics:
Press release: Richard E. Taylor (SLAC), Jerome E. Friedman (MIT), and Henry W. Kendall (MIT) shared the 1990 Nobel Prize in Physics "for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics." (SLAC-E-4 experiment series)
Richard E. Taylor Nobel autobiography
Richard E. Taylor Nobel lecture.
Richard E. Taylor Nobel banquet speech.
1993-1999 Lewis M. Terman Professor, Stanford
2003 - 2018 Emeritus Professor, SLAC, Stanford
Richard E. Taylor, Nobel Winner Who Plumbed Matter, Dies at 88. New York Times, March 1, 2018
Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Taylor dies at 88
Dick Taylor stories
A biographical essay was published in the 2003 SLAC Employee Service Awards Program, in celebration of Professor Taylor's 40th anniversary at SLAC.
Biographical profile of Dick Taylor :
Dick Taylor's long association at SLAC and Stanford began in the mid 50's with his thesis under Bob Mozley at HEPL. From HEPL he went to the linear accelerator lab at Orsay, France. He spent a year at LBL before coming to the fledgling SLAC housed in the M-1 building at Stanford. Dick was involved in the design of the Beam Switchyard, then design and construction of the End Stations as a member of Group A, headed by Pief. As Pief took on additional responsibilities Dick became group leader, heading the effort to design the End Station A spectrometers and the counting house - the whole electron scattering facility. Early experiments involved elastic electron scattering in collaboration with MIT and Caltech. The comparison of electron and positron scattering was followed by the famous deep inelastic scattering experiments that showed quarks inside nucleons. These experiments culminated in Charlie Prescott's polarized electron scattering experiment demonstrating parity violation. (H. DeStaebler, SLAC Beamline, June 1986)
Events and Photos
Richard Taylor Nobel Prize SLAC Celebration.
Some talks about the recent Nobel Prize Award: Panofsky, Neal, Garwin, Boyarski, Cottrell, Coward, DeStaebler, Breidenbach, Bloom, Bjorken and Taylor / Drell as MC.
For a list of description of photos of Professor Taylor (some with thumbnails) in the SLAC Archives and History Office collections, please go to the SALLIE (Stanford ALL Image Exchange) and search the SLAC catalog (works best in Firefox or Chrome browsers)
Publications
For a list of Professor Taylor's Publications, please see the entries in inSPIRE HEP; and Scopus.
Presentations
An Historical review of lepton proton scattering. Richard E. Taylor (SLAC). Jun 1992. Presented at 1991 SLAC Summer Institute on Particle Physics: Lepton Hadron Scattering, Stanford, CA, 5-16 Aug 1991. Published in SLAC Summer Inst.1991:0001-19
Inelastic electron-Nucleon Scattering Experiments .Richard E. Taylor (SLAC). Mar 1976. Invited paper presented at Int. Symposium on Lepton and Photon Interactions, Stanford Univ., Calif., Aug 21-27, 1975
Archival Materials
Richard Taylor papers held by the SLAC Archives, History & Records Office are currently being processed, and are not yet open for research. SLAC staff may access descriptions of his papers by clicking this link and entering his last name, first initial in the search box at the upper right on that page.
Awards & Honors
1971-1972 Fellow, Guggenheim Foundation
1980 Doctorate (Honoris Causa) Université de Paris-Sud
1982 Alexander von Humboldt Senior Scientist Award
1985 Fellow, Royal Society of Canada
1986 Fellow, American Physical Society
1989 APS Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky Prize
1990 Nobel Prize in Physics along with Friedman and Kendall "for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics."
1992 Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
1992 Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science
1993 Foreign Associate, U.S. National Academy of Science
1997 Fellow, Royal Society of London
2005 Companion of the Order of Canada
2008 Canadian Science and Engineering Hall of Fame