Chien-Shiung Wu was doing similar work and invited Wiener to work at Columbia University as a research associate. There she met Wu's graduate student Chellis Chasman and together they investigated beta decay. They married in 1962.[1]
In the following years, she facilitated important contributions to the development of particle accelerators, redesigning the alternating-gradient proton synchrotron (AGS). Together with George Kenneth Green, she is known for the invention of the Chasman-Green lattice for synchrotron storage rings.
She died in 1977 from melanoma.[2] The Brookhaven National Lab has a scholarship named after Chasman.[3]
References
^ abcdChasman, Deborah & Courant, Ernest D. (1993). "Renate Wiener Chasman". In Grinstein, Louise S.; Rose, Rose K. & Rafailovich, Miriam H. (eds.). Women in Chemistry and Physics: A Biobibliographic Sourcebook. Greenwood Press. pp. 94–100.