Bigeleisen was born on May 2, 1919, in
Paterson, New Jersey. He graduated in 1935 from
Eastside High School, where he was one of less than 200 of 1,200 students who took a rigorous classical curriculum. His mother wanted him to go to college and a friend suggested that he study chemistry, noting that Paterson's dye companies that served the textile plants there would always need chemists. He attended the University College of
New York University in
the Bronx, earned a master's degree in 1941 from Washington State College in
Pullman (since renamed as
Washington State University), and was awarded a doctorate in 1943 from the
University of California, Berkeley.
Manhattan Project He became part of the Manhattan Project at
Columbia University, where he worked on methods to achieve the separation of the uranium-235 needed to complete an atomic bomb using the
enriched uranium, from the more plentiful, but non-fissile, isotope
uranium-238, which constitutes more than 99% of
uranium ore. The method of photochemistry that Bigeleisen researched did not lead to an effective method of separating the uranium isotopes, and
gaseous diffusion and methods that took advantage of the electromagnetic properties of uranium proved to be more effective means of
isotope separation. Bigeleisen's research led to the development of isotope chemistry based on the principle that heavier isotopes formed stronger
chemical bonds allowing for the creation of a straightforward theory to explain the progress of chemical reactions through the interaction of isotopes in gaseous form, which he did together with
Maria Goeppert-Mayer, who would later win the
Nobel Prize in Physics. Bigeleisen developed the basic theories of the effect of isotopic substitution on chemical equilibrium (
equilibrium isotope effect) and on reaction rates (
kinetic isotope effect). Research he did in collaboration with
Harold Urey that studied the varying levels of
isotopes of oxygen in marine fossils allowed for the determination of the water temperature that prevailed while the animals were alive. He did research at
Ohio State University and the
University of Chicago after the war. He was hired in 1948 by the
Brookhaven National Laboratory, before moving to the
University of Rochester in 1968 and to the
State University at Stony Brook in 1978. and a Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1968. In 1974, he was awarded a
Guggenheim Fellowship. In an address in March 1983 at Washington State University at ceremonies where he was awarded the college's Distinguished Alumnus Award, Bigeleisen advocated on behalf of nuclear disarmament, saying that "we have to stop putting our efforts into building more and more bombs" and that the time had come to start dismantling the tens of thousands of nuclear warheads in the nation's stockpile. Though he said that he didn't regret his participation in the Manhattan Project, Bigeleisen stated that "having lived through that time, that any further use of nuclear weapons is out of the question."
Death Bigeleisen died at age 91 on August 7, 2010, in
Arlington, Virginia due to
pulmonary disease. He was survived by his wife, Grace, as well as by three sons and six grandchildren. ==References==