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George Clark, professor emeritus and X-ray astronomy leader, dies at 94

Longtime MIT faculty member led investigations into cosmic-ray physics and gamma-ray and X-ray astronomy.
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Portrait photo of George Clark wearing a blazer over an open-collar shirt, looking directly into the camera
Caption:
“My greatest satisfaction from 60 years of work in science is having participated in the start of several new areas of research in cosmic physics,” said George Clark. “I’m astonished and delighted to see how those areas have developed, and awed at the scale and complexity of the projects developed to support them.”
Credits:
Photo: Justin A. Knight
Black-and-white photo from 1956 of two men assembling a balloon gondola.
Caption:
Professors William Kraushaar (left) and George Clark close the air-tight cover on the balloon gondola that carried the second of their two (unsuccessful) balloon experiments in search of high-energy cosmic gamma rays.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of the MIT Museum.
Six men at SAS control room desk. Five are watching the sixth write with a pencil on paper.
Caption:
In the SAS-3 control room are (from left to right:) Bill Mayer, Jeff McClintock, David Hearn, Saul Rappaport, George Clark, and Ben Laufer.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of the Department of Physics.
two men next to satellite rocket lying on its side.
Caption:
George Clark (left) with Dick Taylor by the SAS-3 prior to its 1975 launch
Credits:
Photo courtesy of the Department of Physics.
George Clark with his arm around his wife, Charlotte.
Caption:
George Clark with his wife Charlotte
Credits:
Photo courtesy of the family of George Clark.
Man on windsurfer with a colorful sail.
Caption:
George Clark windsurfing on Edgartown Great Pond at Martha’s Vineyard in 1978
Credits:
Photo: Walter Lewin

MIT Professor Emeritus George Whipple Clark PhD ’52, an astrophysicist who was highly influential in X-ray and gamma-ray astronomy, died on April 6 in Boston. He was 94.

Clark employed buckets, balloons, rockets, and satellites in his nearly lifelong pursuit to understand the nature and origins of cosmic rays, gamma rays, and X-rays.

Clark discovered the polarization of cosmic-ray muons, collaborated with the late physics professor Bruno Rossi on several large ground-based cosmic-ray air shower experiments, and used balloon-borne and satellite instrumentation to locate X-ray sources. 

He was a principal scientist for satellite experiments that resulted in the discovery of high-energy gamma rays from the Milky Way galaxy, and produced evidence for an isotropic component that is now known to arise from other, more distant galaxies. His influential work in the use of balloon-borne instrumentation for observing celestial X-ray sources led to his discovery of high-energy X-rays from the Crab Nebula. A primary contributor to the NASA OSO-7 and Einstein satellite X-ray astronomy missions, Clark initiated the use of Bragg reflection for high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy with Professor Claude R. Canizares for the latter. He was the principal investigator for the MIT X-ray instruments on the Third Small Astronomy Satellite (SAS-3).

“He helped chart the future of X-ray astronomy by prioritizing the Chandra X-ray Observatory,” says MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research Director Robert Simcoe. “He played a major role in the discovery of celestial gamma-ray sources.” 

On the MIT Department of Physics faculty for 44 years, Clark also recruited and mentored several generations of leading astrophysicists. He was a founding member of MIT's Center for Space Research, now the MIT Kavli Institute.

Early interest in science

Clark was born on August 31, 1928, one of four children raised by the late Robert Keep Clark, an MIT alumnus who was the general manager of a stove factory, and Margaret Whipple Clark, a pianist and graduate of Oberlin College. Growing up in Harvey, Illinois, his interest in science bloomed when, as a seventh-grader, he was fascinated by his father's 1895 college chemistry textbook. Together, they set up a basement lab. “I made all sorts of experiments and chemicals, some of which give me the willies when I think about them now,” Clark had recalled.

But it was his father's copy of “Amateur Telescope Making” that taught Clark how to ground and polish a 6-inch parabolic mirror, which he placed into a 4-foot telescope that he mounted in a field near his family’s summer home. He would later use that 6-inch mirror when he taught Junior Lab at MIT.

In high school, he took advanced junior college courses in chemistry and calculus, and in 1945, he finished in the top 10 in the Westinghouse Science Talent Search with an essay about his chemical work with rare-earth elements. He earned a trip to Washington, D.C., where he had his picture taken with Vice President Harry S. Truman and had tea with First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.

MIT launch

After graduating from Harvard University in 1949 with a BA in physics, he pursued his doctorate at MIT, joining Bruno Rossi’s Cosmic Ray Group in the Laboratory for Nuclear Science and Engineering. After receiving his PhD in 1952, he joined MIT as an instructor. 

“Professor Rossi invited me on a journey of exploration that would be guided by his unerring sense of scientific opportunity,” Clark said. He added that it was a time when “public support of curiosity-driven research was at its peak, based on the recognition that it was the foundation of the spectacular successes of goal-oriented war research.”

When Rossi aimed to discover the origins of cosmic rays, Clark and other Cosmic Ray Group members worked on several large cosmic-ray air shower experiments to measure the energy spectrum of the primary cosmic rays, as well as to determine their arrival directions. 

He collaborated with Peter Bassi, a visiting scientist from Italy, to set up scintillation detectors — 5-gallon cans filled with toluene — on the roof of the physics building. Electrical pulses were displayed on an oscilloscope viewed by an automatic film camera, and the resulting measurements proved that using the novel methods of density sampling and fast timing could yield arrival directions within a few degrees and shower sizes within a few percent. This led to a larger such experiment on the grounds of the Agassiz Station of the Harvard College Observatory, and other MIT-led air shower experiments in India, Bolivia, and New Mexico.

Clark and his colleague William Kraushaar created balloon-borne experiments to detect a very rare component of the primary cosmic radiation but were thwarted by the high rate of background events caused by radiation higher up. That’s when the newly created NASA offered space on its Explorer 11 satellite for Kraushaar and Clark’s high-energy gamma-ray telescope. 

The pair designed the 82-pound satellite in the shape of a potato masher, designed to tumble in orbit to scan the entire sky; from April to September 1961 it registered 31 events of possible cosmic gamma rays until it powered down. Gordon Garmire joined them in creating an improved gamma-ray telescope that flew in 1967 on Orbiting Solar Observer 3 (OSO-3). It demonstrated convincingly that gammas of energies above 70 million electron-volts (MeV) were emanating from the Milky Way and also offered the first evidence for what is now known to be gamma rays from distant galaxies. 

X-ray vision

The sun was the only known source of cosmic X-rays, and Rossi wished to find other sources but was too busy with other projects, so he asked his former student Martin Annis for help. Annis was president of American Science and Engineering (AS&E), a small research firm located on Carleton Street, where MIT Medical now stands. It had been founded a few years earlier by Annis and Clark, his former Rossi Group student colleague and friend.

Annis referred Rossi to a recent hire, Riccardo Giacconi, who immediately took to Rossi’s suggestion that a search for cosmic X-ray sources be carried out. The AS&E scientists and Rossi carried out a rocket experiment in 1962 that discovered a bright celestial X-ray source, which they called Sco X-1, because it was located in the constellation of Scorpius. This launched the field of extra-solar X-ray astronomy.

AS&E began with contracts with the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratory to research weapons’ effects, including radiation, at high altitudes. But AS&E continued to use rockets to explore the X-ray sky with the participation of MIT scientists, one of whom was a visiting scientist from Japan, Minoru Oda, who soon became the father of a thriving program of X-ray astronomy in Japan. In 1967, MIT began its own X-ray astronomy rocket program under the direction of Professor Hale Bradt.

During all this activity, Clark focused his research on this new field. Cosmic X-ray photons with energies greater than 15 kilo-electron-volts (keV) could penetrate to altitudes accessible by a helium-filled balloon, so he loaded an X-ray telescope with a scintillation detector onto a giant “skyhook” balloon in Texas. It scanned the Crab Nebula, which became the first known cosmic X-ray source emitting X-ray energies greater than 15 keV. The balloon program continued with productive results under Clark’s graduate student James Overbeck, and then under Professor Walter Lewin. Notable were measurements of a change in the X-ray flux from the source Cygnus X-1 and a flare in the flux from Sco X-1.

“X-ray astronomy was sort of a surprise,” says Bradt. “Nobody really predicted that there should be detectable sources of X-rays out there.”  

In the 1960s and 1970s, Clark’s research also used NASA satellites to carry out X-ray astronomy observations, notably OSO-7 (1971-74), SAS-3 (1975-79), and Einstein (1978-81).

Clark pushed for an AS&E/NASA satellite X-ray observatory, to be launched in 1970 from Kenya as the First Small Astronomy Satellite (SAS-1), named Uhuru (Swahili for “freedom”) under the leadership of Giacconi.

Clark was a principal investigator on the Seventh Orbiting Solar Observatory, or OSO-7 Satellite, for MIT’s first X-ray satellite experiment which yielded, in collaboration with MIT research scientist Thomas Markert, an all-sky survey of X-ray sources. 

He followed this as principal investigator on SAS-3, a NASA satellite carrying the first X-ray observatory that could point at a given source continuously for sustained periods. The SAS-3 satellite could be “driven” by a team of professors, postdocs, and students taking turns around the clock to direct the observatory’s operation from MIT. It produced a plethora of rich results and discoveries elucidating the nature of  X-ray emitting binaries, “bursters,” novae,  pulsars, globular clusters, a soft diffuse background, and magnetic white dwarfs. 

“Within a couple of hours of an observation we received ‘quick-look’ data by a dedicated line from the NASA control center, and a few days later the complete observation and engineering data on magnetic tape,” recalled Clark. 

Clark received the NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Award for his work as principal investigator of the Einstein Observatory Focal Plane Crystal Spectrometer, which used the technique of Bragg spectroscopy to perform high-resolution spectroscopic studies of cosmic X-ray sources in the 0.2-3 keV energy range, on the Einstein X-Ray Observatory (HEAO-2, 1978-81). The second of NASA’s three High Energy Astrophysical Observatories, Einstein was a Large Orbiting X-Ray Telescope — the first fully imaging X-ray telescope put into space.  

Clark strongly advocated for a NASA mission that would become the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE), which would carry an MIT experiment, an All-Sky Monitor, an effort led by Bradt. RXTE observers studied sources exhibiting intensity variations ranging from milliseconds to years over a period of 16 years (1995-2012).  

Clark and other X-ray astronomers in the United States took advantage of “guest observer” opportunities with Japanese and European orbiting X-ray observatories during a hiatus of NASA X-ray astronomy missions in the 1980s.

As a member of the National Academy of Sciences decadal study (the “Field Report”), Clark helped chart the future of X-ray astronomy by prioritizing the development of Einstein’s successor, the Advanced X-Ray Astrophysics Facility, later renamed the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Chandra features a high-resolution large collecting area, and sensitivity to higher energy X-rays to study extremely faint sources in crowded fields. Clark used Chandra data to study the grain-scattered X-ray halos of accretion-powered binaries, and from the shape and size of a halo he tried to figure out the location and characteristics of the dust and the distance of the star.

Earth-bound professor and coach

One day, Clark said to Canizares, “Did you ever think what we would be doing if we weren’t being paid to have fun?” 

When Clark hired Canizares in 1971, it was a period where most astrophysicists in the department were physicists learning astronomy as they went. Clark “took Bruno Rossi’s original ideas and really was able to move them forward,” says Canizares. “He really helped me throughout my career and did a lot to further the careers of his students and colleagues.”

Clark was a member of the MIT physics faculty for 44 years, from his appointment as instructor in 1952, assistant professor in 1954, professor in 1965, and 1985 as the first Breene Kerr Professor of Physics. He served as astronomy division chair from 1983-88 and took sabbaticals in 1985 and 1994 to perform research at the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science in Tokyo, Japan.   

In 1996, he became a professor post-tenure (retired). He continued to teach class 8.13/8.14 (Junior Lab) until 1998, and mentored students until he officially retired and became an emeritus professor in 2001. He continued to attend department colloquia, and he published a major single-author paper based on Chandra data in 2018.

Clark was a member of the American Physical Society, American Astronomical Society, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the National Academy of Sciences. He served on the Study Committee for Institutional Arrangements for the Space Telescope, and on boards and committees with the Associated Universities for Research in Astronomy, American Science and Engineering, and NASA.   

At MIT, he was respected by colleagues and students for his contributions to the field and dedication to teaching.

“My greatest satisfaction from 60 years of work in science is having participated in the start of several new areas of research in cosmic physics,” Clark said. “I’m astonished and delighted to see how those areas have developed and awed at the scale and complexity of the projects developed to support them.”

Clark was known as the professor who offered clear explanations to his students, stayed after his lectures to answer questions, and would often be seen dashing through the halls to make it to the next classroom. But Bradt recalled that as his advisor, Clark could also be pretty hands-off. 

“When I took my thesis experiment up to New York State, three trailers with detectors, electronics, and a generator, I didn’t see George out there but once. We were on the phone at critical times. He was not in your hair all the time but was available when needed. He was the perfect thesis supervisor.”

But Clark was also “the kind of guy who loves to roll up his sleeves and do some real work,” Mark Schattenburg, now a senior research scientist at the Kavli Institute, said in a letter presented at Clark’s retirement fete. “Give him a ladder and some roofing shingles, or an oscilloscope and a piece of laboratory apparatus, and it doesn’t matter, he’s happy.”

Bradt was preparing for a test run in the Building 26 Penthouse and was proceeding very slowly, checking each electronic circuit. When Clark stopped in, he did some “George Clarking” — turned on all of the equipment and watched it start counting. “A lot was wrong, but we found out about it all right away,” Bradt recalls. “He said, ‘Try it all, and that’s when you find where the problems are.’”

G.W. Clark also earned another nickname: “Gee Whiz Clark,” because of his habit of declaring, after a demonstration in electromagnetic theory, “Gee whiz, isn’t that interesting.”

In 1991, Clark received the MIT School of Science Teaching Prize for his many years in charge of the Junior Physics Laboratory. It was his steady work ethic that earned him this prize, recalls his stepson, Blair Reischer: “My family was visiting my mother and George for a few days. After drinks and a dinner that ran typically late, everyone was retiring for the night. Except George, who went upstairs to his study to work. I popped my head in his door and asked him what he was doing. He said he was preparing a lecture for freshman physics. I said, ‘George, you've been doing this for over 30 years. You should be able to phone this in!’ He said, ‘The kids get smarter every year.’ “

Retirement

In recent years, he was a familiar face at department events and astrophysics colloquia. At a recent event, Canizares learned about his illness, “but he was still full of energy and talking about how he loved his new Tesla.” 

Illness didn’t slow him down. Even a week before he died, Clark was still driving that Tesla from his Chestnut Hill home to his happy place, Martha’s Vineyard, where he had built a hexagonal house based on an article in Popular Mechanics, near Edgartown. There, he and his family would play tennis and croquet, windsurf, forage for oysters and mushrooms, and host large gatherings with friends and MIT community members.

“He was the eternal young guy, the Jack Kennedy with a full head of hair, full of energy,” recalls Bradt.

Clark is survived by his daughter Jacqueline; his stepchildren Bridget Reischer, Blair Reischer, Sybil Reischer Ecroyd, and Electa Reischer; and four grandchildren, Otto Ecroyd, Rosalind Reischer, Peter Reischer, and Geneva Reischer Harburger. His daughter Katherine (Kasia) Whipple Clark died in October 2022, and his beloved wife, Charlotte Huston Reischer, died in 2019.

A celebration of his life will be held in Brookline, Massachusetts, at noon on Sunday, May 21. All attendees are invited to speak. For more information, email georgeclarkmemorial1928@gmail.com.

Memorial contributions can be made to the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute or the National Academies’ Committee on Human Rights

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