Frisch, Otto Robert
born Oct. 1, 1904, Vienna, Austria
died Sept 22, 1979, Cambridge,
Cambridgeshire, Eng.
physicist who, with his aunt Lise Meitner, described the
division of neutron-bombarded uranium into lighter elements and named the
process fission (1939). At the time, Meitner was
working in Stockholm and Frisch at Copenhagen under Niels
Bohr, who brought their observation to the attention of Albert Einstein and
others in the United States.
After receiving his doctorate at
Vienna (1926), Frisch, with Otto Stern and Immanuel Estermann,
measured the magnetic moment of the proton (1933). During World War II he was
engaged in atomic research at Los Alamos, N.M. From 1947 he taught at Cambridge
and directed the nuclear physics department of the Cavendish Laboratory. His
books include Atomic Physics Today (1961).