Jon T. Hougen
Jon Torger Hougen was an American spectroscopist.
Education and career
Hougen finished his undergraduate degree at the University of Wisconsin in 1956. He obtained his master's and doctoral degrees at Harvard University. He worked at Harvard under the research direction of William Moffitt and William Klemperer. He started his career in 1960 as a postdoctorate fellow at the National Research Council of Canada in the molecular spectroscopy group of Gerhard Herzberg. He joined the staff at NRC in 1962 and supervised postdoctoratefellows J.K.G.Watson and Philip Bunker. In 1967 he joined the National Bureau of Standards. He started there as a member of D.R. Lide's microwave and infrared group. Later, he was the chief of the molecular spectroscopy section. In 1984, he was named a Senior Research Fellow of NIST. For a year, he served as acting chief of the molecular physics division. After retiring in 2001, he continued his research as a NIST Scientist Emeritus.
Research
His research focused on quantum mechanical and group theoretical calculations of quantities related to molecular spectroscopy.Three of his most-cited publications are:
- This paper introduced a Hamiltonian that has come to be called the Hougen-Bunker-Johns Hamiltonian.
Hobbies
He spoke several languages: French, French-Canadian, German, Czech, Japanese, and Mandarin in addition to English.Awards and honors
Hougen was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1979. In addition, Hougen received the following awards:- Coblentz Award
- NBS Silver Medal
- NBS Gold Medal
- Ellis R. Lippincott Award
- Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy
- Marcus Marci Award from the Czech Spectroscopy Society
Two awards were created in his memory: the Jon Hougen Travel Award for the 26th Colloquium on High-Resolution Molecular Spectroscopy and the Jon Hougen Memorial Award, awarded annually at the International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy.