Bardeen returned to the University of Washington in 1976, remaining there until his retirement in 2006. Together with Michael S. Turner and Paul Steinhardt, he published a paper in 1982 detailing the way submicroscopic fluctuations in the density of matter and energy in the early universe would bring about the arrangement of galaxies seen in the present day.[1] Bardeen was also a Distinguished Visiting Research Fellow[4] at Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. In 2012, he was elected to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.[5]
Personal life
Bardeen married Nancy Thomas in 1968. They met the year before in Paris while he was attending a conference, and remained married until his death. Together, they had two children, William and David.[1]
Bardeen's brother, William A. Bardeen, was also a physicist.[1] His sister, Elizabeth, was married to Thomas Greytak, a physicist at MIT. In a 2020 interview given to Federal University of Pará in Brazil, Bardeen recalls his journey as a physicist, his father's influences on him, his experiences as a doctoral student of Richard Feynman, and working with Stephen Hawking.[6][7][8]
Bardeen died on June 20, 2022, at a retirement home in Seattle. He was 83, and suffered from cancer prior to his death.[1]