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Bunny Cowan Clark

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bunny Cowan Clark
Born(1935-09-08)September 8, 1935
DiedOctober 2015(2015-10-00) (aged 80)
NationalityAmerican
Alma mater
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsTheoretical physics
InstitutionsOhio State University
ThesisOptical model partial wave analysis of intermediate energy (0.6 - 1.0 GeV) proton-nucleus elastic scattering (1973)

Bunny Cowan Clark (September 8, 1935 – October 2015) was an American nuclear physicist and a professor of physics at Ohio State University. She attended Kansas State University for both her bachelor's and master's degrees. She earned her doctorate in physics from Wayne State University in 1973.

Personal life and education

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Clark was born on September 8, 1935, in El Paso, Texas.[citation needed]. She gained her B. S. degree from Kansas State University in 1958, followed by her M.S. degree in 1963 with a thesis about Frequency spectrum of elastic waves in body centered cubic lattices with Basil Curnutte and Robert Herman supervising her research.[1] She then studied with A. M. Saperstein for her doctorate at Wayne State University.

Career

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Clark joined the Physics faculty at Ohio State University in 1981, becoming a professor in 1986.[2] Her research was within nuclear theoretical physics. At the 2001 Commencement Address for Ohio State, she spoke candidly about her experience as a woman in physics.

I ignored, I don't know how many comments like: 'Bunny, why don't you go into library science?' 'Bunny you should learn to type.' Physics was not supposed to be a women's work.[2]

Clark was a fierce advocate for women in physics. She helped create the American Physical Society Committee on Status of Women in Physics.[3] Clark quit accepting graduate students after an incident in 1994, in which a female graduate student was dismissed despite receiving higher scores than some of the male students that were retained.[3]

Clark was well known for her generosity. She worked tirelessly to help young faculty members and graduate students secure funding.[3]

If our students needed a refrigerator in their room, she bought them a refrigerator ... She used her money to support people in whatever way seemed necessary if it wasn’t something you could get from the grant or department.

— Robert Perry, professor of physics at Ohio State University[4]

Publications

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Clarke was the author or co-author of over 60 scientific publications. These included:

  • E. D. Cooper, S. Hama, and B. C. Clark (2009) Global Dirac optical potential from helium to lead. Physical Review C 80 034605
  • L. Kurth Kerr, B. C. Clark, S. Hama, L. Ray, G. W. Hoffmann (2000) Theoretical and Experimental K+ + Nucleus Total and Reaction Cross Sections from the KDP-RIA Model. Progress of Theoretical Physics 103 (2) 321–335
  • E. D. Cooper, S. Hama, B. C. Clark, and R. L. Mercer (1993) Global Dirac phenomenology for proton-nucleus elastic scattering Physical Review C 47 297
  • E. D. Cooper, B. C. Clark, R. Kozack, S. Shim, S. Hama, J. I. Johansson, H. S. Sherif, R. L. Mercer, and B. D. Serot (1987) Global optical potentials for elastic p +40 Ca scattering using the Dirac equation. Physical Review C 36 2170(R)
  • J. B. Bellicard, P. Bounin, R. F. Frosch, R. Hofstadter, J. S. McCarthy, F. J. Uhrhane, M. R. Yearian, B. C. Clark, R. Herman, and D. G. Ravenhall (1967) Scattering of 750-MeV Electrons by Calcium Isotopes. Phys. Rev. Lett 19 527

She also published about women in physics, including:

Recognition and legacy

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Clark was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), after a nomination from the APS Division of Nuclear Physics, "for contributions to relativistic treatment of nucleon scattering from nuclei".[5][6]

Clark and her husband Tom created the Bunny and Thomas Clark Scholarship Endowment Fund at the Ohio State University Physics Department. The endowment awards scholarships to both undergraduate and graduate students, with an emphasis on underrepresented groups such as women and minorities.[4] After the deaths of her and her husband, her colleague and friend Robert Mercer[7] and the Mercer Family Foundation established the Bunny C. Clark Student Support Fund.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Clark, Bunny Cowan (1963). Frequency spectrum of elastic waves in body centered cubic lattices (PDF). Kansas State University.
  2. ^ a b "Bunny Clark, Physics". Office of Research. 2019-11-06. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
  3. ^ a b c Clark, Bunny (June 26, 2007). "Interview of Bunny Clark by Judith Ball Fountain". hdl:1811/29291 – via kb.osu.edu.
  4. ^ a b c "The legacy of late professor and female physicist Bunny Clark". College of Arts and Sciences. November 27, 2018.
  5. ^ "APS Fellows Nominated by DNP: 1984". Retrieved 2020-06-25.
  6. ^ "APS Fellow Archive". Americal Physical Society. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  7. ^ "Legacy of Prof. Bunny Clark featured in ASC News". physics.osu.edu.