Tsung-Dao Lee (born November 24, 1926, Shanghai, China—died August 4, 2024, San Francisco, California, U.S.) was a Chinese-born American physicist who, with Chen Ning Yang, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1957 for work in discovering violations of the principle of parity conservation (the quality of space reflection symmetry of subatomic particle interactions), thus bringing about major refinements in particle physics theory.
In 1946 Lee was awarded a scholarship to study in the United States, and, although he had no undergraduate degree, he entered the graduate school in physics at the University of Chicago, where Enrico Fermi selected him as a doctoral student. After working briefly at the University of Chicago’s Yerkes Astronomical Observatory in Wisconsin, the University of California at Berkeley, and for two years with Yang at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, Lee was appointed assistant professor of physics at Columbia University in 1953.
In 1956 Lee and Yang concluded that the theta-meson and tau-meson, previously thought to be different because they decay by modes of differing parity, are in fact the same particle (now called the K-meson). Because the law of parity conservation prohibits a single particle from having decay modes exhibiting opposite parity, the only possible conclusion was that, for weak interactions at least, parity is not conserved. They suggested experiments to test their hypothesis, and in 1956–57 Chien-Shiung Wu, working at Columbia University, experimentally confirmed their theoretical conclusions. (See also CP violation.)
In 1960 Lee was appointed professor of physics at the Institute for Advanced Study, and three years later he returned to Columbia to assume the first Enrico Fermi professorship in physics; he retired as professor emeritus in 2012. Beginning in 1964, he made important contributions to the explanation of the violations of time-reversal invariance, which occur during certain weak interactions.