James Peebles

American physicist
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Also known as: Jim Peebles, P. J. E. Peebles
Quick Facts
In full:
Philip James Edwin Peebles
Born:
April 25, 1935, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (age 89)
Awards And Honors:
Nobel Prize (2019)

James Peebles (born April 25, 1935, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) is a Canadian-born American physicist who was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize for Physics for his work on physical cosmology. He received one half of the prize; the other half was awarded to Swiss astronomers Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz.

Peebles received a bachelor’s degree in 1958 from the University of Manitoba and a doctorate in 1962 from Princeton University. He remained at Princeton for the remainder of his career, becoming an assistant professor in 1965 and a full professor in 1972. He became the Albert Einstein Professor of Science in 1984 and a professor emeritus in 2000.

In 1965 Peebles was part of a group at Princeton headed by physicist Robert Dicke that was interested in physical evidence of the big bang theory. Peebles figured that the big bang had left behind a cosmic microwave background (CMB). However, before Peebles, Dicke, and their collaborators began efforts to observe the CMB, American physicists Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson contacted them with their observations of what Peebles and his team would identify as the CMB. (Penzias and Wilson won the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics for their discovery.)

Nicolaus Copernicus. Nicolas Copernicus (1473-1543) Polish astronomer. In 1543 he published, forward proof of a Heliocentric (sun centered) universe. Coloured stipple engraving published London 1802. De revolutionibus orbium coelestium libri vi.
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With the discovery of the CMB, the origin and evolution of the universe became a subject not of idle theory but of fruitful scientific inquiry. In 1965 Peebles wrote a paper positing that galaxies would not have been able to form until the universe had expanded enough and thus cooled enough for gravity to overcome the counteracting effect of the hot thermal blackbody radiation that filled the universe. The next year he showed that the temperature of the universe had a great effect on the amount of helium produced. At some point the temperature would drop so that deuterium would no longer be converted into helium, and thus elements heavier than helium would not form. (Prior to this work, astronomers believed that the heavier chemical elements could have been made in the big bang.)

In 1970 Peebles and graduate student Jer Yu considered the CMB’s angular power spectrum and how it would change based on the matter density of the universe. Peebles and Yu calculated what the observed power spectrum would look like and prefigured the later satellite observations of the CMB such as those from Planck and WMAP.

Peebles in 1982 was one of the first cosmologists to consider cold dark matter as crucial to the formation of structures such as galaxy clusters and galaxies. Most matter in the universe is dark matter that only interacts with other matter through gravity. The dark matter is called cold because it moves at speeds much slower than light.

Peebles wrote Physical Cosmology (1971), The Large-Scale Structure of the Universe (1980), and Principles of Physical Cosmology (1993). He also wrote a textbook, Quantum Mechanics (1992), and edited (with Lyman Page and Bruce Partridge) a compilation of reminiscences by cosmologists, Finding the Big Bang (2009).

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Erik Gregersen