I was born
in Neuenkirchen, North-Rhine Westphalia, in the Federal Republic of Germany on
May 16, 1950, as the fourth child of Anton and Elisabeth Bednorz. My parents,
originating from Silesia, had lost sight of each other during the turbulences
of World War II, when my sister and two brothers had to leave home and were moved
westwards. I was a latecomer completing our family after its joyous reunion in
1949.
During my childhood, my father, a primary school teacher and
my mother, a piano teacher, had a hard time to direct my interest to classical
music. I was more practical-minded and preferred to assist my brothers in fixing
their motorcycles and cars, rather than performing solo piano exercises. At school
it was our teacher of arts who cultivated that practical sense and helped to develop
creativity and team spirit within the class community, inspiring us to theater
and artistic performances even outside school hours. I even discovered my interest
in classical music at the age of 13 and started playing the violin and later the
trumpet in the school orchestra.
My fascination in the natural sciences
was roused while learning about chemistry rather than physics. The latter was
taught in a more theoretical way, whereas in chemistry, the opportunity to conduct
experiments on our own, sometimes even with unexpected results, was addressing
my practical sense.
In 1968, I started my studies in chemistry at
the University of Münster, but somehow felt lost due to the impersonal atmosphere
created by the large number of students. Thus I soon changed my major to cristallography,
that field of mineralogy which is located between chemistry and physics.
In 1972, Prof. Wolfgang Hoffmann and Dr. Horst Böhm, my teachers,
arranged for me to join the IBM Zürich Research Laboratory for three months
as a summer student. It was a challenge for me to experience how my scientific
education could be applied in reality. The decision to go to Switzerland set the
course for my future. The physics department of which I became a member was headed
by K. Alex Müller, whom I met with deep respect. I was working under the
guidance of Hans Jörg Scheel, learning about different methods of crystal
growth, materials characterization and solid state chemistry. I soon was impressed
by the freedom even I as a student was given to work on my own, learning from
mistakes and thus losing the fear of approaching new problems in my own way.
After my second visit in 1973, I came to Rüschlikon for six months
in 1974 to do the experimental part of my diploma work on crystal growth and characterization
of SrTiO3, again under the guidance of Hans Jörg Scheel. The perovskites
were Alex Müller's field of interest and, having followed my work, he encouraged
me to continue my research on this class of materials.
In 1977, after
an additional year in Münster, I joined the Laboratory of Solid State Physics
at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich and started
my Ph.D. thesis under the supervision of Prof. Heini Gränicher and K. Alex
Müller. I gratefully remember the time at the ETH and the family-like atmosphere
in the group, where Hanns Arend provided a continuous supply of ideas. It was
also the period during which I began to interact more closely with Alex and reamed
about his intuitive way of thinking and his capability of combining ideas to form
a new concept.
In 1978, Mechthild Wennemer followed me to Zürich
to start her Ph.D. at the ETH, but more importantly to be my partner in life.
I had met her in 1974 during our time together at the University of Münster.
Since then she has acted as a stabilizing element in my life and is the best adviser
for all decisions I make, sharing the up's and down's in an unselfish way.
I completed my work on the crystal growth of perovskite-type solid solutions
and investigating them with respect to structural, dielectric and ferroelectric
properties, and joined IBM in 1982. This was the end of a ten-year approach which
had begun in 1972.
The intense collaboration with Alex started in
1983 with the search for a high-TC superconducting oxide; in my view, a long and
thorny but ultimately successful path. We both realized the importance of our
discovery in 1986, but were surprised by the dramatic development and changes
in both the field of science and in our personal lives.
Addendum
1991
Honours
Thirteenth Fritz London Memorial Award
(1987), Dannie Heineman Prize (1987), Robert Wichard Pohl Prize (1987), Hewlett-Packard
Europhysics Prize (1988), The Marcel Benoist Prize (1986), Nobel Prize for Physics
( 1987), APS International Prize for MaterialsResearch (1988), Minnie Rosen Award,
the Viktor Mortiz Goldschmidt Prize and the Otto Klung Prize
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990, Editor-in-Charge Tore Frängsmyr, Editor Gösta Ekspång, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1993
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
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