'Heinrich Rohrer' (born
June 6,
1933) is a Swiss
physicist and
Nobel laureate.
He was born in
St. Gallen half an hour after his twin sister. He enjoyed a carefree country childhood until the family moved to
Zürich in 1949. He enrolled in the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in 1951, where he studied with
Wolfgang Pauli. His doctoral dissertation was on his work measuring the length changes of superconductors at the magnetic-field-induced superconducting transition, a project begun by
Jörgen Lykke Olsen. In the course of his research, he lost all respect for
angstroms and found that he had to do most of his research at night after the city was asleep because his measurements were so sensitive to vibration.
His studies were interrupted by his military service in the Swiss mountain infantry. In 1961, he married Rose-Marie Egger. Their honeymoon trip to the
United States included a stint doing research on thermal conductivity of type-II superconductors and metals with
Bernie Serin at
Rutgers University in
New Jersey.
In 1963, he joined the
IBM Research Laboratory in
Rüschlikon under the direction of
Ambros Speiser. The first couple of years at IBM, he studied
Kondo systems with magnetoresistance in pulsed magnetic fields. He then began studying
magnetic phase diagrams, which eventually brought him into the field of critical phenomena.
In 1974, he spent a
sabbatical year at the
University of California in
Santa Barbara, California studying
nuclear magnetic resonance with
Vince Jaccarino and
Alan King.
He shared the
Nobel Prize in Physics for
1986 with
Gerd Binnig for their design of the
scanning tunneling microscope (STM).