Willard Harrison Bennett (
June 13,
1903 –
September 28,
1987) was a
scientist and
inventor, born in
Findlay,
Ohio. Bennett conducted research into
plasma physics,
astrophysics,
geophysics,
surface physics, and
physical chemistry. The
Bennett pinch is named after him.
Biography
Born in
Findlay, Ohio, Bennett attended
Carnegie Institute of Technology from 1920-22 and
Ohio State University; the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Sc.M. in physical chemistry, 1926; and the
University of Michigan, Ph.D. in physics, 1928. Bennett was elected to a National Research Fellowship in Physics and in 1928 and 1929 studied at the
California Institute of Technology. In 1930 he joined the Physics faculty at Ohio State. Following service in
World War II, Bennett worked at the National Bureau of Standards, the
University of Arkansas, and the
United States Naval Research Laboratory. In 1961, he was appointed Burlington Professor of Physics at
North Carolina State University (emeritus in 1976). Bennett held 67
patents.
Bennett made scientific history in the 1930s pioneering studies in plasma physics - the study of gases ionized by high-voltage electricity. Bennett invented radio frequency mass spectrometry in (1955). Bennett's radio frequency mass spectrometer measured the masses of atoms. It was the first such experiment in space. He also researched gases ionized by high voltage electricity. This research was used in later thermonuclear fusion research.
Invention impact
These studies and later research have been used throughout the world in controlled
thermonuclear fusion research. In the 1950s, Bennett's experimental tube called the Stormertron predicted and modeled the
Van Allen radiation belts surrounding the earth six years before they were discovered by satellite. It also reproduced intricate impact patterns found on the earth's surface which explained many features of the polar aurora.
Sputnik 3 carried the first radio frequency mass spectrometer into space. It was the only space instrument used by the Russians and
credited to an American inventor in their own Russian-language publications.
External links