Wilson was born on June 8, 1936, in Waltham, Massachusetts, the oldest child of Emily Buckingham Wilson and
E. Bright Wilson, a prominent chemist at Harvard University, who did important work on microwave emissions. His mother also trained as a physicist. He attended several schools, including
Magdalen College School, Oxford, UK, ending up at the
George School in eastern Pennsylvania. He went on to
Harvard College at age 16, majoring in Mathematics and, on two occasions, in 1954 and 1956, ranked among the top five in the
William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. He was also a star on the athletics track, representing Harvard in the Mile. During his summer holidays he worked at the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He earned his
PhD from
Caltech in 1961, studying under
Murray Gell-Mann. He did post-doc work at Harvard and CERN. He joined
Cornell University in 1963 in the Department of Physics as a junior faculty member, becoming a full professor in 1970. He also did research at
SLAC during this period. In 1974, he became the James A. Weeks Professor of Physics at Cornell. In 1982 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on
critical phenomena using the
renormalization group. He was a co-winner of the
Wolf Prize in physics in 1980, together with
Michael E. Fisher and
Leo Kadanoff. His other awards include the A.C. Eringen Medal, the Franklin Medal, the Boltzmann Medal, and the Dannie Heinemann Prize. He was elected a member of the National Academy of Science and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Science, both in 1975, and also was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1984. In 1985, he was appointed as Cornell's Director of the Center for Theory and Simulation in Science and Engineering (now known as the
Cornell Theory Center), one of five national supercomputer centers created by the
National Science Foundation. In 1988, Wilson joined the faculty at
Ohio State University. Wilson moved to Gray, Maine in 1995. He continued his association with Ohio State University until he retired in 2008. Prior to his death, he was actively involved in research on physics education and was an early proponent of "active involvement" (i.e. Science by Inquiry) of K-12 students in science and math. Some of his PhD students include
H. R. Krishnamurthy,
Roman Jackiw,
Michael Peskin,
Serge Rudaz,
Paul Ginsparg, and
Steven R. White. and his wife since 1982, Alison Brown, is a prominent computer scientist. He died in Saco, Maine, on June 15, 2013, at the age of 77. He was respectfully remembered by his colleagues. ==Work==