Angular and Career Momentum: What Lucy Mensing Contributed to Physics and Why She Left the Field

Münster, Gernot; Janssen, Michel

Forschungsartikel (Buchbeitrag) | Peer reviewed

Zusammenfassung

In 1925, as matrix mechanics was taking shape, Lucy Mensing, who earned her PhD with Lenz and Pauli in Hamburg, came to Göttingen as a postdoc. She was the first to apply matrix mechanics to diatomic molecules, using the new rules for the quantization of angular momentum. As a byproduct, she showed that orbital angular momentum can only take integer values. Impressed by this contribution, Pauli invited her to collaborate on the susceptibility of gases. She then went to Tübingen, where many of the spectroscopic data were obtained that drove the transition from the old to the new quantum theory. It is hard to imagine better places to be in those years for young quantum physicists trying to make a name for themselves. This chapter describes these promising early stages of Mensing’s career and asks why she gave it up three years in. We argue that it was not getting married and having children that forced Lucy Mensing, now Lucy Schütz, out of physics, but the other way around. Frustration about her own research in Tübingen and about the prevailing male-dominated climate in physics led her to choose family over career.

Details zur Publikation

Herausgeber*innenCharbonneau, Patrick; Frank, Michelle; van der Heijden, Margriet; Monaldi, Daniela
BuchtitelWomen in the History of Quantum Physics - Beyond Knabenphysik
Seitenbereich102-148
VerlagCambridge University Press
ErscheinungsortCambridge
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2025
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
ISBN978-1009535830
StichwörterHistory of Physics; History of Quantum Mechanics

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Münster, Gernot
Fachbereich 11 Physik (FB11)