Charles A. Whitten Jr.

 

Died December 4, 2010

College: Silliman
Major: Physics
Graduate School: Princeton University, M.A., Physics, 1963; Princeton University, Ph.D., Physics, 1966

Widow: Mrs. Joan Emann Whitten
9844 Vicar Street
Los Angeles, CA 90034-2719
310-559-4152
jewhitten@yahoo.com

Children: Charles A. III, 1973

Charles A. Whitten Jr.

January 20, 1940 – December 4, 2010

It is with great sorrow that we share with you the news that our friend and colleague, Professor Charles A. Whitten, Jr., unexpectedly passed away on Saturday, December 4, 2010. Chuck was a vibrant teacher and powerful researcher. He was also a devoted departmental citizen. The department has relied continuously on his efforts and advice on a wide variety of issues, and we will certainly miss his counsel, along with his uniquely enthusiastic presence.

My Silliman roommate, Chuck Whitten, passed away suddenly on December 4, 2010. I hadn’t seen or spoken with Chuck for several years, but I know from conversations with his widow, Joan, that nothing much had changed from the last time I saw him.

Chuck was a UCLA physics professor for about 40 years. He enjoyed teaching and loved to teach the introductory course, to pre-meds as well as aspiring scientists, in the hopes of interesting students in further study of the subject. He once told me that physics was his hobby as well as his profession. If he got bored, he would go down to the lab and see what the boys in the lab were doing. He truly loved what he did, and the memorial statements put together at UCLA showed that he was much loved and respected by his colleagues and his students.

There was another side to Chuck, however. At Yale, he played the clarinet in the band, was an avid Yale and New York Giants football fan and took courses on history and philosophy such as Professor Baumer’s class on the Rennaisance and Reformation. When he came to UCLA, he got football and basketball season tickets and cheered for the Bruins. He had a booming voice and a good sense of humor, enjoyed talking to the non-professional staff and, Joan told me, was always aware of the department gossip.

Physics allowed the Whittens to travel the world. Chuck was part of various teams on projects in Berkeley, Los Alamos, Long Island and Chicago as well as in France, Britain and Switzerland. It was not unusual for Chuck to teach for two quarters and live wherever experiments were being run for the next half-year. But he was also a good family man. Joan went with him on his travels when she could. His son, Alec, followed him to Yale and is an architect in Los Angeles, living fairly near his parents. I am told that Chuck enjoyed doing things with his grandchildren.

I am sorry that my relationship with Chuck had become limited over the years to occasional e-mails and the exchange of Christmas cards, but I guess that is not unusual in the modern world. Chuck was a good guy, and I will miss him.

Bill Lear

UCLA Today

Physicist Charles A. Whitten, Jr., dies at age 70

chuck-whitten-mug

Charles A. Whitten, Jr., a physicist who helped lead his department’s successful research efforts in the field of nuclear physics over the last four decades, died unexpectedly Saturday, Dec. 4, in Los Angeles at age 70.

Whitten played a major role in the UCLA-led discovery that spin observables in elastic proton-nuclear reactions were compatible with a phenomenological treatment using the Dirac equation.

Born on Jan. 20, 1940, he received his B.S. degree summa cum laude in 1961 at Yale University and his M.A. and Ph.D. at Princeton University. He utilized the Princeton cyclotron to obtain the data for his Ph.D. thesis. Returning to Yale as a postdoctoral fellow, he joined a team doing nuclear research under the direction of D. A. Bromley at the newly established tandem Van de Graf laboratory over the next two years.

He came to UCLA as an assistant professor in 1968 to work with the 50 MeV spiral ridge cyclotron, built under the leadership of Professor Reginald Richardson, and established a new research direction at the facility using a technique for measuring decay protons. Whitten’s research work extended the useful life of the cyclotron facility and resulted in a number of important publications.

After the demise of the cyclotron in 1972, Whitten turned his attention to the field of intermediate nuclear physics and studied proton-induced reactions at the Los Alamos Meson Physics Facility (LAMPF). Whitten assisted in the development of a precision instrument, called the High Resolution Spectrometer, at the facility.

From 1975 to 1985, Whitten became one of the leading lights in spin physics when polarized proton beams became available at LAMPF. He later joined the Spin Muon Collaboration on an experiment at CERN and also worked on a heavy ion experiment there. He was responsible in large part for the successful construction of a large time-projection chamber for this experiment.

Beginning in 1993, he was a seminal member of the STAR Collaboration at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, where his interests in spin physics and heavy ion experiments continued to expand.

Known for his ability to explain conceptual matters to struggling students, Whitten taught undergraduates almost exclusively and predominantly lower-division courses for large groups of students. Promoted to full professor in 1980, he received the department’s Outstanding Teaching Award in 1988-89 and again in 1998-99.

He served as a faculty graduate adviser for more than 10 years. “He was truly concerned about the progress of each and every one of our graduate students,” said Professor Emeritus George Igo. “He was a man of integrity in both his professional and personal life.”

Whitten is survived by his wife Joan, son Alec and two grandchildren. A memorial has been planned for Friday, Dec. 10, at 3:30 p.m. at the Faculty Center. In lieu of flowers, his family is requesting that memorial donations be made to provide scholarships to deserving teaching assistants in the Department of Physics and Astronomy. Checks can be made out to the UCLA Foundation with “Charles A. Whitten Memorial” in the memo line.

Donations may be sent to the Chair’\’s Office, UCLA Department of Physics and Astronomy, 475 Portola Plaza, Room 2-707 PAB, Box 951547, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1547

My Silliman roommate, Chuck Whitten, passed away suddenly on December 4, 2010. I hadn’t seen or spoken with Chuck for several years, but I know from conversations with his widow, Joan, that nothing much had changed from the last time I saw him.

Chuck was a UCLA physics professor for about 40 years. He enjoyed teaching and loved to teach the introductory course, to pre-meds as well as aspiring scientists, in the hopes of interesting students in further study of the subject. He once told me that physics was his hobby as well as his profession. If he got bored, he would go down to the lab and see what the boys in the lab were doing. He truly loved what he did, and the memorial statements put together at UCLA showed that he was much loved and respected by his colleagues and his students.

There was another side to Chuck, however. At Yale, he played the clarinet in the band, was an avid Yale and New York Giants football fan and took courses on history and philosophy such as Professor Baumer’s class on the Rennaisance and Reformation. When he came to UCLA, he got football and basketball season tickets and cheered for the Bruins. He had a booming voice and a good sense of humor, enjoyed talking to the non-professional staff and, Joan told me, was always aware of the department gossip.

Physics allowed the Whittens to travel the world. Chuck was part of various teams on projects in Berkeley, Los Alamos, Long Island and Chicago as well as in France, Britain and Switzerland. It was not unusual for Chuck to teach for two quarters and live wherever experiments were being run for the next half-year. But he was also a good family man. Joan went with him on his travels when she could. His son, Alec, followed him to Yale and is an architect in Los Angeles, living fairly near his parents. I am told that Chuck enjoyed doing things with his grandchildren.

I am sorry that my relationship with Chuck had become limited over the years to occasional e-mails and the exchange of Christmas cards, but I guess that is not unusual in the modern world. Chuck was a good guy, and I will miss him.

Bill Lear