Ann Arbor on April 21, 2020, at the age of 100. Courant was a distinguished
scientist. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a
recipient of the Enrico Fermi Award, awarded by the United States
Government in recognition of lifetime scientific achievement, as well as
many other honors and awards for his scientific work. He was known as the
“father of modern particle accelerators.” Essentially all high-energy
accelerators in use today incorporate principles that he helped to develop.
He spent most of his career at Brookhaven National Laboratory, interspersed
with visiting appointments at Princeton University, the University of
Cambridge, Yale University, the University of Michigan, Stony Brook
University, and Fermilab, among other places.
Ernest Courant was born in Goettingen, Germany, in 1920. His father,
Richard Courant, was head of the Institute of Mathematical Sciences at the
University of Goettingen, and his mother, Nina, was a musician. Ernest was
the oldest of four children, all of whom are now deceased. In 1933 Richard
Courant was removed from his position as a professor by the Nazi regime.
In 1934 the family moved to New Rochelle, a suburb of New York. Richard
became head of the math department at New York University, which became
the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences.
Ernest graduated from high school at the Fieldston School in the Bronx,
received his undergraduate degree in physics from Swarthmore College at
the age of 20, and completed his Ph.D. at the University of Rochester in
1943. He spent 1944 and 1945 working on nuclear physics at the Montreal
Laboratory, which was part of the Manhattan Project that developed the
atomic bomb. Montreal was also the home of Sara Paul, who worked as lab
technician. She and Ernest were married in 1944.
In 1948 Ernest moved to Brookhaven Lab, where he spent most of his life
and did most of his work, designing and building particle accelerators. He
“retired” in 1990 but continued to be scientifically active for more than
twenty more years, spending a day a week at Brookhaven even after he and
Sara had moved to Manhattan.
Ernest was an active hiker, skier, flute-player, photographer, bicycle-rider,
opera buff, and concertgoer. He swam several days a week and frequently
rode his bicycle around Central Park well into his eighties. Ernest and Sara
moved to Ann Arbor from New York in 2013.
Courant is survived by his wife of 75 years, who spent her career as a
librarian and library director, and by his children, Paul (Marta Manildi), who is a professor at the University of Michigan, and Carl, who is a retired
economist with the New York Power Authority. He is also survived by
dozens of students and colleagues, three grandchildren, Ernest Mendel,
Noah, and Sam, and three great-children, who provided him with limitless
joy.
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