William Cochran Born: 30-Jul-1922 Birthplace: Edinburgh, Scotland Died: 28-Aug-2003 Location of death: Edinburgh, Scotland Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist, Chemist Nationality: Scotland Executive summary: Crystallography Scottish physicist William Cochran made important early contributions to x-ray crystallography of biological compounds, and researched lattice dynamics, neutron diffraction, and the structure of the rochelle salt crystals. He worked under Nobel laureate Lawrence Bragg, and later collaborated with two future Nobel winners, first assisting Francis Crick in understanding the diffraction patterns of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), which Crick and James Watson developed into their double helix, and later worked with Bertram N. Brockhouse on neutron scattering, which underpinned Brockhouse's later work.
Wife: Ingegerd Cochran (m. 1953, one son, two daughters)
High School: Boroughmuir High School, Edinburgh, Scotland (1942) University: BS Physics, University of Edinburgh (1946) Teacher: Natural Philosophy, University of Edinburgh (1946-48) University: PhD Chemistry, University of Edinburgh (1946) Teacher: Chemistry, Cambridge University (1948-64) Professor: Physics, University of Edinburgh (1964-87) Administrator: Dean of Science, University of Edinburgh (1979-82) Administrator: Vice Principal, University of Edinburgh (1984-87)
Hughes Medal 1978 Royal Society Royal Society of Edinburgh Vice President (1982-85)
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