Lawrence Lidsky

Lawrence Mark Lidsky (1935–2002) was a professor of nuclear engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).[1][2]

Lidsky was born in Brooklyn, New York, on October 15, 1935.[2] He did his undergraduate studies at Cornell University, graduating in 1958,[1][2] and earned a doctorate in nuclear engineering from MIT in 1962 with a thesis entitled "Plasma Generation and Acceleration",[2] after which he joined the MIT faculty.[1][2]

Lidsky was the advisor to more than 80 graduate students and the founding editor of the Journal of Fusion Energy.[2] In 1983, as assistant director for the MIT Plasma Fusion Center, Lidsky wrote an influential article about the difficulties of making a working nuclear fusion power plant.[1][2][3] The ensuing reduction in federal funding for fusion research led him to resign from the center,[1][2] and caused him to be "drummed out" of the nuclear fusion research community.[4] Because of his concerns with the viability of fusion power, he instead became an advocate for safer nuclear fission reactor designs.[1][2][5][6] In 1999 he was named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science "for outstanding contributions to both nuclear fission and fusion in education, research, system design and analysis, technical publications and federal policy".[2][7]

He died March 1, 2002 in Newton, Massachusetts, after struggling with cancer for many years.[1][2]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Long, Thomas (March 7, 2002), "Lawrence M. Lidsky; Exposed Problems with Fusion Energy", Boston Globe.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Retired MIT Professor Lidsky dies; questioned fusion power research", MIT News, March 5, 2002.
  3. Haney, Daniel Q. (October 3, 1983), MIT prof says fusion won't work as energy source, Associated Press.
  4. Lippman, Thomas W. (April 21, 1992), "40-Year Effort to Harness Fusion Energy Generates New Skepticism", Washington Post.
  5. Tye, Larry (April 11, 1989), "Return of the Nukes? Small, Gas-cooled Reactors are Billed as Safer, Cheaper", Boston Globe, No one is working harder to tap that new interest than Lawrence Lidsky, a professor of nuclear engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  6. Charles, Dan (November 4, 1989), "Nuclear safety: some like it hot", New Scientist: 58–61.
  7. "Eight MIT faculty and staff named Fellows of AAAS", MIT News, December 8, 1999.

External links

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