The Mark of One Man





Dr. Van Allen once told a writer that he had placed a moist fingerprint on a gold-plated instrument package carried aboard the Pioneer 10 spacecraft just prior to its 1972 launch to explore Jupiter, Saturn and the outer reaches of the solar system. It comforted and amused him, he said, to think that he had left his mark on an object  currently more than 8 billion miles from Earth  that will be traveling among the stars long after he had died.

He also left his mark in far more scientifically significant ways, chiefly in the 1958 discovery of the radiation belts that bear his name, the 1973 first-ever survey of Jupiter's radiation belts using the Pioneer 10 spacecraft, and the 1979 discovery and survey of Saturn's radiation belts using Pioneer 11.

But his work didn't end there. Right through his 1985 retirement from active teaching and into 2006, he continued to be a presence in the University of Iowa Department of Physics and Astronomy, counseling students and colleagues and publishing research papers based upon cosmic ray data from Pioneer 10, which continued to send back data until 2003.

For his work, he received many awards, including membership in the National Academy of Sciences; the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest honor for scientific achievement and awarded by President Ronald Reagan; and the Crafoord Prize, presented by the King of Sweden, for scientific research in fields not recognized by the Nobel Prize.

Dr. Van Allen left his mark on students, too, including 35 doctoral students and 48 master's degree students, some of whom went on to study magnetospheric physics, a field of study he created. Also important to him were his many undergraduate students, many of whom did not major in the sciences. I taught General Astronomy for 17 years, and it was my favorite course, he once said.