Everything about Hugh Everett totally explained
Hugh Everett III (
November 11,
1930 –
July 19,
1982) was an American physicist who first proposed the
many-worlds interpretation (MWI) of
quantum physics, which he called his "relative state" formulation. He left physics after completing his Ph. D., discouraged at the lack of response to his theories from other physicists. He developed the use of generalized
lagrange multipliers in
operations research and applied this commercially as a defense analyst and a consultant, becoming a multi-millionaire. He was married to Nancy Everett née Gore, with two children,
Mark Oliver Everett and Elizabeth Everett.
Biography
Everett was born in
Maryland and raised in the
Washington, D.C. area. After
World War II, Everett's father was stationed in
West Germany, and Hugh visited
Leipzig in
East Germany in 1949. He graduated from
The Catholic University of America in 1953 in
chemical engineering, and then received a
National Science Foundation fellowship that allowed him to attend
Princeton University. He started his studies at Princeton in the Mathematics Department working on the then-new field of
game theory, but slowly drifted into physics. In 1953 he started taking his first physics courses, notably Introductory Quantum Mechanics with
Robert Dicke.
For his second term at Princeton, starting in 1954, he moved into the Physics Department. His main course that year was Methods of Mathematical Physics with
Eugene Wigner, although he stayed active in math and presented a paper on military game theory in December. He passed his general exams in the spring of 1955, thereby gaining his
Master's degree, and then started work on his dissertation that would (much) later make him famous. He switched thesis advisors to
John Wheeler some time in 1955, completed his paper in January 1956 as
The Theory of the Universal Wave Function, and eventually defended his thesis after some delay in the spring of 1957. A short article summarizing his relative state interpretation appeared in Reviews of Modern Physics Vol 29 #3 454-462, (July 1957), accompanied by a supportive review by Wheeler. The physics world took little note.
Upon graduation in September 1956, Everett was invited to join the Pentagon's newly-forming
Weapons Systems Evaluation Group (WSEG), run by the
Institute for Defense Analyses. He was soon sent to
Sandia National Laboratories to learn about
nuclear weapons and became a fan of computer modelling while there. In 1957 he became director of the WSEG's Department of Physical and Mathematical Sciences. However, Everett soon had to leave work at WSEG to return to Princeton for his thesis defense. When he returned to WSEG he immediately recommenced his research, most of which remains classified. It is known that he worked on various studies of the
Minuteman missile project, which was then starting, as well as
The Distribution and Effects of Fallout in Large Nuclear Weapon Campaigns.
During March and April 1959, at Wheeler's request, Everett visited Copenhagen in order to meet with
Niels Bohr, considered to be the "father of
quantum mechanics". Bohr was unimpressed, and refused to take Everett's ideas very seriously. Everett was crestfallen, but while in his hotel he started work on a new idea to use
Lagrange multipliers for optimization that would later lead to financial success.
In August 1964 the
Defense Research Corporation (DRC) spun off the
Lambda Division to apply military modeling solutions to various civilian problems. Everett left the WSEG and became the head of the new Division, along with a million dollar budget. The next year they took the division public as
Lambda Corporation, a
think tank that returned primarily to military research. After three years he stepped down as president in order to focus on research, as by this point the company was growing so rapidly that administration duties were interfering. In the early 1970s the defense budgets were curtailed and most money went to operational duties in the
Vietnam War, leading to Lambda eventually being re-purchased by the DRC, now known as General Research Corp.
In 1973 Everett left Lambda to form
DBS Corporation in
Arlington, Virginia, a computer consulting firm. Much of their work appears to have been in statistical analysis. He appears to have enjoyed programming, and spent the rest of his life working at DBS. He also opened
Monowave Corporation with several DBS and family friends.
In 1970
Bryce DeWitt wrote an article for
Physics Today on Everett's relative-state theory. This time the physics world seemed much more interested, and a flood of letters followed. Meanwhile
Bryce DeWitt, who had corresponded with Everett on the many-worlds (DeWitt's phrase) / relative state interpretation when originally published in 1957, started editing an anthology on interpretations of quantum mechanics gathered from over 500 papers. The book was published late in 1973, and it wasn't long before an article on Everett's work appeared in the
science fiction magazine, Analog. In 1977 he was invited to give a talk at a meeting Wheeler arranged at Wheeler's new location at the
University of Texas at Austin, where Everett was the star of the show and continually surrounded by a throng of "groupie" students. As his fame grew, Wheeler eventually started the process of returning Everett to a physics career by setting up a new research institute in California, but nothing came of this proposal.
Martin Gardner states that Wheeler subsequently came to reject the MWI.
Everett, who believed in
quantum immortality, died suddenly at home in his bed on
July 19 1982 of a
heart attack at the age of only 51. It is possible that his constant
chain-smoking and heavy drinking contributed to this, although he was outwardly healthy at the time. A committed atheist, he'd asked to be thrown out with the trash after his death. Some time after his cremation, his wife complied.
Of the companies Everett founded, only
Monowave Corporation still exists (in
Seattle as of November 2007) and is still run by co-founder Elaine Tsiang.
Everett's daughter, Elizabeth, suffered from
schizophrenia and committed suicide in 1996 (saying in her suicide note that she was going to a parallel universe to be with her father), and in 1998, his wife, Nancy, died of cancer. Everett's son,
Mark Oliver Everett, who found Everett dead, is also known as "E" and is the lead singer and songwriter for the band
Eels. The Eels album
Electro-Shock Blues, which was written during this time period, is reflective of these deaths. Mark explored his father's work in the hour-long BBC television documentary "Parallel Worlds, Parallel Lives".
Footnotes
Many-Worlds References
- (External Link
)
- Hugh Everett III "The Theory of the Universal Wavefunction", Manuscript (1955), pp 3-140 of Bryce DeWitt, R. Neill Graham, eds, The Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, Princeton Series in Physics, Princeton University Press (1973), ISBN 0-691-08131-X The original and most comprehensive paper on many-worlds. Investigates and recasts the foundations of quantum theory in information theoretic terms, before moving on to consider the nature of interactions, observation, entropy, irreversible processes, classical objects etc.
- John A. Wheeler, Assessment of Everett's "Relative State Formulation of Quantum Theory", Reviews of Modern Physics, vol 29, (1957) pp 463-465 (External Link
)
Operations Research References
Hugh Everett III, "Generalized Lagrange Multiplier Method For Solving Problems of Optimum Allocation of Resources", Operations Research, vol 11, (1963), pp 399-417
Hugh Everett III, George E Pugh, "The Distribution and Effects of Fallout in Large Nuclear-Weapon Campaigns", Operations Research, vol. 7, (1959), pp. 226-248
Biographical Sources
Eugene Shikhovtsev's Biography of Everett
John Archibald Wheeler, Geons, Black Holes & Quantum Foam, ISBN 0-393-31991-1. pp 268-270
Interview: Parallel lives can never touch
, Mark Everett talking to Peter Aldhous, New Scientist, 24 November 2007.Further Information
Get more info on 'Hugh Everett'.
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