In 1950, Villars was hired as a research associate at MIT and eventually became a full professor in 1959. Along with
Victor Weisskopf, he studied the scattering of radio waves owing to atmospheric turbulence. With
Herman Feshbach, he studied the effect of the Earth's magnetic field on the
ionosphere. It was biology, however, that captured his imagination. Villars applied mathematical methods to studying the functioning of biological systems, yielding insights that had been missed by biologists and medical researchers who had been studying them for years. Villars was a key figure in creating the
Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, a collaboration between
Harvard University and MIT. Villars was also a visiting lecturer at
Harvard Medical School. With MIT physics professor
George B. Benedek, he wrote a three-volume undergraduate textbook,
Physics with Illustrative Examples from Medicine and Biology. Villars died of cancer at his home in
Belmont, Massachusetts on 27 April 2002. He was 81. ==Books==