Elda Emma Anderson

American physicist
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Quick Facts
Born:
Oct. 5, 1899, Green Lake, Wis., U.S.
Died:
April 17, 1961, Oak Ridge, Tenn. (aged 61)
Subjects Of Study:
health physics
atomic bomb

Elda Emma Anderson (born Oct. 5, 1899, Green Lake, Wis., U.S.—died April 17, 1961, Oak Ridge, Tenn.) was an American physicist who played a pivotal role in developing the field of health physics.

Anderson’s affinity for numbers and her general intellectual gifts were apparent from girlhood. After graduating from Ripon College (B.S., 1922) in Ripon, Wisconsin, she earned (1924) a master’s degree in physics from the University of Wisconsin. Her doctorate in physics from the same institution was granted in 1941. In the interim she taught physics and chemistry at schools in Iowa and Wisconsin. In 1941–42 she took a sabbatical leave from Milwaukee-Downer College, where she was chairman of the physics department, to work at the Office of Scientific Research and Development at Princeton University. In 1943 she became part of the team of scientists who developed the atomic bomb at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory in New Mexico. After her time at Los Alamos, Anderson returned in 1947 to her former teaching position at Milwaukee-Downer College, but she soon found the academic life too tame. In 1949 she left academia to become the first chief of education for the Health Physics Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.

Health physics—the study of the effects of radiation on human health—was obviously a new field when Anderson entered it, and she spent the rest of her life at Oak Ridge developing it. Her research there resulted in her 1950 publication, Manual of Radiological Protection for Civil Defense. She helped establish a master’s degree program in health physics at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and organized international courses in the field in Sweden, Belgium, and India. After the Health Physics Society was formed in 1955, Anderson held several official posts, including president. She also served as secretary and then chairman of the American Board of Health Physics, created by the Health Physics Society to establish professional standards and to certify the individuals who meet those standards. Anderson remained active even after she was diagnosed with leukemia in 1956. The Elda E. Anderson Award is given annually to an outstanding young health physicist.

Italian-born physicist Dr. Enrico Fermi draws a diagram at a blackboard with mathematical equations. circa 1950.
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