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Presented By: Department Colloquia

Spin Centennial: Celebrating 100 Years of Spin at the University of Michigan

Various Speakers

George Uhlenbeck (left) with Hendrik Kramers (middle) and Samuel Goudsmit, taken around 1928 in Ann Arbor, MI. George Uhlenbeck (left) with Hendrik Kramers (middle) and Samuel Goudsmit, taken around 1928 in Ann Arbor, MI.
George Uhlenbeck (left) with Hendrik Kramers (middle) and Samuel Goudsmit, taken around 1928 in Ann Arbor, MI.
The Centennial marks 100 years since the concept of spin was “invented” by two young physicists in the Netherlands, who then came to the U.S. and began their academic careers at the University of Michigan.

In 1925, to explain puzzles in the observed spectra of atoms, George Uhlenbeck and Samuel Goudsmit postulated the existence of a new intrinsic property of the electron, which came to be known as spin. In 1926, Uhlenbeck and Goudsmit joined the University of Michigan Physics Department. The physics department at University of Michigan, and others across the world, have continued to harness this revolutionary concept to advance the fields of Quantum Mechanics, Nuclear Physics, and more recently, Quantum Computing.



Join us for a Special Physics Colloquium (1:30-2:30 pm)
Gerald Gabrielse, Board of Trustees Professor in Physics/Director of CFP (Northwestern University)

Spin Centennial Symposium (3:00-5:30 pm)
The special colloquium will be followed by a symposium of talks for the general public on the history of spin in physics and its applications, which impact everyone’s life every day and into the future.
George Uhlenbeck (left) with Hendrik Kramers (middle) and Samuel Goudsmit, taken around 1928 in Ann Arbor, MI. George Uhlenbeck (left) with Hendrik Kramers (middle) and Samuel Goudsmit, taken around 1928 in Ann Arbor, MI.
George Uhlenbeck (left) with Hendrik Kramers (middle) and Samuel Goudsmit, taken around 1928 in Ann Arbor, MI.

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