Abdus Salam
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1922-1941. (In corso di traduzione in
italiano)
The Nobel Prize in Physics
Abdus Salam was born in Jhang, a small town
in what is now Pakistan, in 1926. His father was an official in the Department
of Education in a poor farming district. His family has a long tradition of
piety and learning.
When he cycled home from Lahore, at the age of 14, after gaining the highest
marks ever recorded for the Matriculation Examination at the University of the
Panjab, the whole town turned out to welcome him. He won a scholarship to
Government College, University of the Panjab, and took his MA in 1946. In the
same year he was awarded a scholarship to St. John's College, Cambridge, where
he took a BA (honours) with a double First in mathematics and physics in 1949.
In 1950 he received the Smith's Prize from Cambridge University for the most
outstanding pre-doctoral contribution to physics. He also obtained a PhD in
theoretical physics at Cambridge; his thesis, published in 1951, contained
fundamental work in quantum electrodynamics which had already gained him an
international reputation.
Salam returned to Pakistan in 1951 to teach mathematics at Government College,
Lahore, and in 1952 became head of the Mathematics Department of the Panjab
University. He had come back with the intention of founding a school of
research, but it soon became clear that this was impossible. To pursue a career
of research in theoretical physics he had no alternative at that time but to
leave his own country and work abroad. Many years later he succeeded in finding
a way to solve the heartbreaking dilemma faced by many young and gifted
theoretical physicists from developing countries. At the ICTP, Trieste, which he
created, he instituted the famous "Associateships" which allowed deserving young
physicists to spend their vacations there in an invigorating atmosphere, in
close touch with their peers in research and with the leaders in their own
field, losing their sense of isolation and returning to their own country for
nine months of the academic year refreshed and recharged.
In 1954 Salam left his native country for a lectureship at Cambridge, and since
then has visited Pakistan as adviser on science policy. His work for Pakistan
has, however, been far-reaching and influential. He was a member of the Pakistan
Atomic Energy Commission, a member of the Scientific Commission of Pakistan and
was Chief Scientific Adviser to the President from 1961 to 1974.
Since 1957 he has been Professor of Theoretical Physics at Imperial College,
London, and since 1964 has combined this position with that of Director of the
ICTP, Trieste.
For more than forty years he has been a prolific researcher in theoretical
elementary particle physics. He has either pioneered or been associated with all
the important developments in this field, maintaining a constant and fertile
flow of brilliant ideas. For the past thirty years he has used his academic
reputation to add weight to his active and influential participation in
international scientific affairs. He has served on a number of United Nations
committees concerned with the advancement of science and technology in
developing countries.
To accommodate the astonishing volume of activity that he undertakes, Professor
Salam cuts out such inessentials as holidays, parties and entertainments. Faced
with such an example, the staff of the Centre find it very difficult to complain
that they are overworked.
He has a way of keeping his administrative staff at the ICTP fully alive to the
real aim of the Centre - the fostering through training and research of the
advancement of theoretical physics, with special regard to the needs of
developing countries. Inspired by their personal regard for him and encouraged
by the fact that he works harder than any of them, the staff cheerfully submit
to working conditions that would be unthinkable here at the International Atomic
Energy Agency in Vienna (IAEA). The money he received from the Atoms for Peace
Medal and Award he spent on setting up a fund for young Pakistani physicists to
visit the ICTP. He uses his share of the Nobel Prize entirely for the benefit of
physicists from developing countries and does not spend a penny of it on himself
or his family.
Abdus Salam is known to be a devout Muslim, whose religion does not occupy a
separate compartment of his life; it is inseparable from his work and family
life. He once wrote: "The Holy Quran enjoins us to reflect on the verities of
Allah's created laws of nature; however, that our generation has been privileged
to glimpse a part of His design is a bounty and a grace for which I render
thanks with a humble heart."
The biography was written by Miriam Lewis, now at IAEA, Vienna, who was at one
time on the staff of ICTP (International Centre For Theoretical Physics,
Trieste).
From Les Prix Nobel 1979.
Source:
http://scienzapertutti.lnf.infn.it/biografie/salam-bio.html