E.M. Purcell (born Aug. 30, 1912, Taylorville, Ill., U.S.—died March 7, 1997, Cambridge, Mass.) was an American physicist who shared, with Felix Bloch of the United States, the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1952 for his independent discovery (1946) of nuclear magnetic resonance in liquids and in solids. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has become widely used to study the molecular structure of pure materials and the composition of mixtures.
During World War II Purcell headed a group studying radar problems at the Radiation Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. In 1946 he developed his NMR detection method, which was extremely accurate and a major improvement over the atomic-beam method devised by the American physicist Isidor I. Rabi.
Purcell became professor of physics at Harvard University in 1949 and in 1952 detected the 21-centimetre-wavelength radiation emitted by neutral atomic hydrogen in interstellar space. Such radio waves had been predicted by the Dutch astronomer H.C. van de Hulst in 1944, and their study enabled astronomers to determine the distribution and location of hydrogen clouds in galaxies and to measure the rotation of the Milky Way. In 1960 Purcell became Gerhard Gade professor at Harvard, and in 1979 he received the National Medal of Science. In 1980 he became professor emeritus.