In 1964 Froissart received the Prix Paul Langevin awarded by the Société Française de Physique (SFP) .[14] He contributed to the 13th International Conference on High-Energy Physics held in Berkeley from the 1st of August to the 7th of September 1966.[15] In January 1967 his paper with John R. Taylor was published.[16] In October 1967 in Brussels, Froissart was an invited participant at the 14th Solvay Conference.[17] In 1973 he was appointed a professor at the Collège de France in the particle physics chair, which he held until he retired as professor emeritus in 2004.[2]
Froissart consolidated into a single laboratory, dependent on his professorial chair, two laboratories — one headed by Francis Perrin and the other by Louis Leprince-Ringuet. At the time of the consolidation, those laboratories were the two largest of the Collège de France. The immediate task was to unify those two laboratories, whose members generally considered the two as competing organizations. A longer-term task was to reduce the size of the laboratory, while maintaining significant activity on the international scene. At the consolidated laboratory, the policy followed by the Collège de France was to only host small, easily mobile units — in case that the professor directing the consolidated laboratory was replaced by a new director pursuing different research goals in physics. Thus, in the consolidated laboratory, the physicists who wanted to work on the LHC, which was not to enter service until after the departure of Professor Froissart, were jointly requested by the Institut national de physique nucléaire et de physique des particules (IN2P3) and the Collège de France to leave the consolidated laboratory and to join LHC-oriened laboratories. Of those researchers who remained in the consolidated laboratory, a majority turned to research on astroparticles (to be in line with Froissart's expertise and leadership in high energy physics). The laboratory then took the name Physique corpusculaire et cosmologie (PCC). When Marcel Froissart retired, the laboratory formed the core of the new Astroparticle and Cosmology Laboratory (APC, AstroParticule et Cosmologie), created in 2006 by Pierre Binétruy. The new laboratory had researchers from Paris Diderot University (Paris 7), the Observatoire de Paris and the Commissariat à l'énergie atomique (CEA).[18]
The famous photographer Martine Franck made a portrait of Froissart.[22] Marcel Froissart was a grandson of the glassmaker Antonin Daum [fr] and a nephew of Michel Froissart [fr], who was in the 1930s one of the designers of the wooden construction technique called froissartage.[23][24]
Upon his death in 2015, Marcel Froissart was survived by his widow, 3 sons, 2 daughters,[25] and 10 grandchildren.[4]
Selected research achievements
Study of the polarization stability of polarized relativistic protons in a synchrotron, showing the existence of resonance energies leading to polarization reversal (Froissart & Stora 1960)
Work on the theory of particle collisions, within the framework of the Mandelstam representation[26][27]
Research of a possible axiomatic justification of the Mandelstam representation (Fotiadi et al. 1965)
Generalization of Bell's inequalities to various systems (Froissart 1981)
Research on the application of the theory of analytic functions to the localization of a point on a plane surface (Patent 1988)
Froissart, Marcel (August 1961). "Asymptotic Behavior and Subtractions in the Mandelstam Representation". Physical Review. 123 (3). American Physical Society: 1053–1057. Bibcode:1961PhRv..123.1053F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.123.1053.
Omnès, Roland; Froissart, Marcel (1963). Mandelstam Theory and Regge Poles: An Introduction for Experimentalists. New York and Amsterdam: W.A. Benjamin. LCCN63022795.[28]
^ abDeTar, C.; Tan, C.; Finkelstein, J., eds. (1985). "Salesman of Ideas by John Polkinghorne". Passion For Physics, A: Essays In Honor Of Geoffrey Chew, Including An Interview With Chew. World Scientific Publishing Company. pp. 23–25. ISBN978-981-12-1920-7.
^Jackson, Allyn. "The World of Blind Mathematicians"(PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Societydate=November 2002. 49 (10): 1246–1251. (See p. 248.)
^U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (1967). "Fundamental Theoretical Questions by M. Froissart". Proceedings of the XIIIth International Conference on High-Energy Physics, Held at Berkeley, California, August 31-September 7, 1966. University of California Press. pp. 13–25.
^Froissart, Marcel; Taylor, John R. (1967-01-25). "Cluster Decomposition and the Spin-Statistics Theorem in S-Matrix Theory". Physical Review. 153 (5). American Physical Society (APS): 1636–1648. Bibcode:1967PhRv..153.1636F. doi:10.1103/physrev.153.1636. ISSN0031-899X.
^Barut, A. O. (1964-05-08). "joint review of Mandelstam Theory and Regge Poles: An introduction for experimentalists by R. Omnès and M. Froissart; Regge Poles and S-Matrix Theory by Steven C. Frautschi; Complex Angular Momenta and Particle Physics: A lecture note and reprint volume by Euan J. Squires". Science. 144 (3619). American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS): 698. doi:10.1126/science.144.3619.698. ISSN0036-8075. PMID17807017.