Leon Pape
Leon Pape was a medical physicist who received his BSc, MSc and PhD in Physics from the University of Southern California. He became certified in radiological physics by the American Board of Radiology and from 1955 to 1962 he worked as a radiological physicist at the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles. He served at the as radiation safety officer and as professor of physics until 1971, and worked on the development of studies in biophysics, radiological health physics, and electron microscopy. He was elevated to departmental head of physics at Cal State Los Angeles, and advocated with the California legislature to secure adequate funding for the 4-MeV Van de Graaf Laboratory, unique to CSU system. From 1971 until his death he worked at the August Krogh Institute at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, in the zoophysiological laboratory. His central research area was membrane biophysics.
Select published works
Thesis
Pape, L.. Report on investigation of asymmetrical resonance pressure broadening of the helium lambda5875 line.Dissertation
Pape, L.. Investigation of Some Structurally Related Characteristics of the Urinary Glycoprotein of Tamm and Horsfall.Articles
- Pape, Leon; Baker, S.; Gildenhorn, Hyman L. A Technic for Cross-Calibration of X-Ray Units Utilizing Half-Value-Layer Determinations
- Jacobs, Melville L.; Pape, Leon Dosimetry for a Total-Body Irradiation Chamber
- Springer, Elliott B.; Pape, Leon; Elsner, Fred; Jacobs, Melville L. High-Energy Radiography for Tumor Localization and Treatment Planning
Leon Pape Memorial Lecture Series
The Leon Pape Memorial Lecture Series was inaugurated by CSU after his "untimely death in January 1984 prompted the establishment of this lecture series in his memory, encompassing his many interests." The award of this Lectureship is highly prestigious, with many Nobel Laureates and prominent academics having delivered it since its inception.- 1984 : "Radioactivity in the Service of Humanity"
- 1985 : "Science Is With People: A Tribute to Leon Pape"
- 1986 : "The Dilemma of Nuclear Weapons"
- 1987 : "How Old is the Observable Universe?"
- 1988 : "The Nature of Metals and Alloys"
- 1989 : "The Life of the Stars"
- 1990 : "A Brief History of the First 15 Billion Years"
- 1991 : "Visual Awareness"
- 1992 : "Simplicity and Complexity"
- 1993 : "The Challenge of Drug Discovery"
- 1994 : "Black Holes and Time Warps: Einstein's Outrageous Legacy"
- 1995 : "Nuclear Weapons: Where Do We Go From Here?"
- 1996 : "In Search of the Fundamental Building Blocks of Nature"
- 1997 : "Two Atmospheric Problems: Ozone Depletion and Global Warming"
- 1998 : "Superfluidity in Helium Three: The Discovery Through the Eyes of a Graduate Student"
- 1999 : "Holding onto Atoms and Molecules with Laser Light"
- 2000 : "Electronic Structure of Matter: Wave Functions and Density Functionals"
- 2001 : "Viruses: The Essence of Life, but Sneaky Critters"
- 2002 : "Freezing Time"
- 2003 : "Light at Bicycle Speed...and Slower Yet!"
- 2004 : "Can Nuclear Weapons Proliferation Be Stopped?"
- 2005 : "What Can We Do With A Quantum Liquid?"
- 2006 : "The Future of Physics"
- 2007 : "Small Wonders: The World of Nanoscience"
- 2008 : "Why are we so excited about carbon nanostructures?"
President of the American Physical Society and president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
- 2009 : "Unveiling a black hole at the center of our galaxy"
- 2010 : "How Science Changed California and The West"