Sir Alfred Brian Pippard, FRS (7 September 1920 – 21 September 2008),[1] was a British physicist. He was Cavendish Professor of Physics from 1971 until 1982 and an Honorary Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, of which he was the first President.
After working as a scientific officer in radar research during the Second World War, he was appointed as a Demonstrator in Physics at the University of Cambridge in 1946, subsequently becoming a Lecturer in the subject in 1950, a Reader in 1959, and the first John Humphrey Plummer Professor of Physics a year later. In 1971 he was elected Cavendish Professor of Physics.[4]
Pippard demonstrated the reality, as opposed to the mere abstract concept, of Fermi surfaces in metals by establishing the shape of the Fermi surface of copper through measuring the reflection and absorption of microwave electromagnetic radiation[5] (see the anomalous skin effect[6]). He also introduced the notion of coherence length in superconductors in his proposal for the non-local generalisation of the London equations[7][8] concerning electrodynamics in superfluids and superconductors. The non-local kernel proposed by Pippard,[9][10][11] inferred on the basis of Chambers' non-local generalisation of Ohm's law) can be deduced within the framework of the BCS (Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer) theory of superconductivity[12] (a comprehensive description of the details of the London–Pippard theory can be found in the book by Fetter and Walecka[13]).
Pippard was the author of Elements of Classical Thermodynamics for Advanced Students of Physics,[14]Dynamics of Conduction Electrons,[15] and The Physics of Vibration.[16] He also co-authored the three-volumes encyclopaedia Twentieth Century Physics.[17]
As the Cavendish Professor of Physics at Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, he compiled Cavendish Problems in Classical Physics,[18] based in large part on past examination questions for Cambridge physics students.
^Pippard, A. B. (1957). "An Experimental Determination of the Fermi Surface in Copper". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 250 (979): 325–357. Bibcode:1957RSPTA.250..325P. doi:10.1098/rsta.1957.0023. S2CID120993464.
^N. W. Ashcroft, and N. D. Mermin, Solid State Physics (Thompson Learning, Inc., London, 1976), Chapter 14, Measuring the Fermi Surface, p. 277, Anomalous Skin Effect; ISBN0-03-083993-9. See Classical skin depth.
^Zhou, Shu-Ang (1991). Electrodynamic Theory of Superconductors. London: Peter Peregrinus Ltd. ISBN0-86341-257-2.
^F. London, Superfluids, Vol. I: Macroscopic Theory of Superconductivity (Dover Publications, New York, 1961), p. 152.
^Pippard, A. B. (1964). "Quantization of Coupled Orbits in Metals II. The Two-Dimensional Network, with Special Reference to the Properties of Zinc". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 256 (1072): 317–355. Bibcode:1964RSPTA.256..317P. doi:10.1098/rsta.1964.0008. S2CID122241308.
^A.L. Fetter, and J. D. Walecka, Quantum Theory of Many-Particle Systems (Dover Publications, New York, 2003), Chapter 13, Superconductivity, Section 49, London-Pippard Phenomenological Theory; ISBN0-486-42827-3
^A. B. Pippard, Elements of Classical Thermodynamics for Advanced Students of Physics (Cambridge University Press, 1957); ISBN0-521-09101-2.
^A. B. Pippard, Dynamics of Conduction Electrons, Documents on Modern Physics (Gordon & Beach, 1965).
^A. B. Pippard, The Physics of Vibration (Cambridge University Press, 2007); ISBN0-521-03333-0
Anthony Tucker, Sir Brian Pippard, The Guardian, Wednesday, 25 September 2008, [1].
John Waldram, Professor Sir Brian Pippard (1920–2008), News and Events, University Offices, University of Cambridge, 24 September 2008, [2].
Professor Sir Brian Pippard (1920–2008), Cambridge Network, 25 September 2008, [3] (Reproduced from University of Cambridge Office of Communications).
John Waldram, Brian Pippard (1920–2008): Low-temperature physicist who excelled in subtle intuitive concepts, Nature 455, 1191 (30 October 2008), [4].
Professor Sir Brian Pippard, Telegraph, 23 September 2008, [5].
Professor Sir Brian Pippard: Cambridge physicist, The Times, 25 September 2008, [6].
Richard Eden, Professor Sir Brian Pippard: Physicist who proved the existence of the Fermi surface and was the first President of Clare Hall, Cambridge, The Independent, Tuesday, 7 October 2008, [7].
Hamish Johnston, Sir Brian Pippard: 1920–2008, PhysicsWorld, 24 September 2008, [8].
Professor Pippard papers HF/LEEWW: 2000.611 2000, The National Archives, [13]. Contents: Typewritten manuscript by Professor Sir Brian Pippard entitled 'Reminiscences of Wartime Radar Research 1941–1945', together with three papers published in The Journal of The Institution of Electrical Engineers in 1946.