In August 1945, a few days before the
surrender of Japan and the end of
World War II, Segrè received an offer from
Washington University in St. Louis of an associate professorship with a salary of . The following month, the
University of Chicago also made him an offer. After some prompting, Birge offered $6,500 and a full professorship, which Segrè decided to accept. He left Los Alamos in January 1946 and returned to Berkeley. In the late 1940s, many academics left the University of California, lured away by higher-salary offers and by the university's peculiar
loyalty oath requirement. Segrè chose to take the oath and stay, but this did not allay suspicions about his loyalty.
Luis Alvarez was incensed that Amaldi, Fermi,
Pontecorvo, Rasetti and Segrè had chosen to pursue
patent claims against the United States for their pre-war discoveries and told Segrè to let him know when Pontecorvo wrote from Russia. He also clashed with Lawrence over the latter's plan to create a rival nuclear-weapons laboratory to Los Alamos in
Livermore, California, in order to develop the
hydrogen bomb, a weapon that Segrè felt would be of dubious utility. Unhappy with his deteriorating relationships with his colleagues and with the poisonous political atmosphere at Berkeley caused by the loyalty oath controversy, Segrè accepted a job offer from the
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The courts ultimately resolved the patent claims in the Italian scientists' favour in 1953, awarding them for the patents related to generating neutrons, which worked out to about $20,000 after legal costs. Kennedy, Seaborg, Wahl and Segrè were subsequently awarded the same amount for their discovery of plutonium, which came to $100,000 after being divided four ways, there being no legal fees this time. After turning down offers from
IBM and the
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Segrè returned to Berkeley in 1952. He was elected to the United States
National Academy of Sciences that same year. He moved his family from Berkeley to nearby
Lafayette, California, in 1955. Working with Chamberlain and others, he began searching for the
antiproton, a
subatomic antiparticle of the
proton. and then discovered by
Carl D. Anderson in 1932. By analogy, it was now expected that there would be an antiparticle corresponding to the proton, but no one had found one, and even in 1955 some scientists doubted that it existed. Using Lawrence's
Bevatron set to 6 GeV, they managed to detect conclusive evidence of antiprotons. Chamberlain and Segrè were awarded the 1959
Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery. This was controversial, because
Clyde Wiegand and
Thomas Ypsilantis were co-authors of the same article, but did not share the prize. Segrè served on the university's powerful Budget Committee from 1961 to 1965 and was chairman of the Physics Department from 1965 to 1966. He supported Teller's successful bid to separate the
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory from the
Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in 1970. He was one of the trustees of
Fermilab from 1965 to 1968. He attended its inauguration with
Laura Fermi in 1974. During the 1950s, Segrè edited Fermi's papers. He later published a biography of Fermi,
Enrico Fermi: Physicist (1970). He published his own lecture notes as
From X-rays to Quarks: Modern Physicists and Their Discoveries (1980) and
From Falling Bodies to Radio Waves: Classical Physicists and Their Discoveries (1984). He also edited the
Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science from 1958 to 1977 and wrote an autobiography,
A Mind Always in Motion (1993), which was published posthumously. That year he reached the University of California's compulsory retirement age. He continued teaching the history of physics. In 1974 he returned to the University of Rome as a professor, but served only a year before reaching the mandatory retirement age. Active as a
photographer, Segrè took many photos documenting events and people in the history of modern science. After his death Rosa donated many of his photographs to the
American Institute of Physics, which named its photographic archive of physics history in his honor. The collection was bolstered by a subsequent bequest from Rosa after her death from an accident in Tivoli in 1997. ==Notes==