Katherine Sopka


Katherine Sopka was a science interviewer, physics professor and historian of physics. She is known for her interviews held with leading scientists, and for work on the history of quantum physics and the physics community in the U.S. in the 1920s and 1930s.

Life

Katherine was born fourth of six children in Dorchester, Boston, and attended Girl's Latin School in Boston. She studied at Radcliffe College, where she obtained her bachelor's degree in physics.
She married John J. Sopka in 1943, and the couple subsequently moved to Dayton, Ohio, where her husband worked with the Manhattan project until the end of the war. They both intended to complete their graduate degrees and returned to Harvard, where Katherine earned her masters degree in physics and John his Ph.D. in mathematics.
Sopka taught physics at Newark State Teachers College and later at the University of Colorado at Boulder. There she worked with Frank Oppenheimer and David Hawkins on developing a curriculum for physics instruction in relation to a project of the Physical Science Study Committee.
Under the supervision of Gerald Holton in the History of Science Department of Harvard University, she studied the theoretical physics community in the U.S. and its dependence on the European physics community of the 1920s. She obtained her Ph.D. in history of science and education at Harvard University in 1976 with her dissertation entitled Quantum Physics in America: 1920–1935.
She actively worked on physics curriculum development, participating in the Harvard Project Physics. She interviewed noted scientists and worked as editor for the American Institute of Physics books series History of Modern Physics.
She died on 30 July 2009 in Salem, Massachusetts.

Oral history transcripts

Sopka recorded her interviews, which became part of physics' oral history. They are archived with the Niels Bohr Library & Archives of the Center for History of Physics, American Institute of Physics, College Park, MD USA.
In 1979 she spoke with Mildred Allen. Alice Armstrong, Dorothy Heyworth,
In 1978, she found Lucy Wilson and Dorothy Weeks
In 1977 her subjects included Melba Phillips, Janet Guernsey, Edward Purcell, Nicolaas Bloembergen, Kenneth T. Bainbridge, John H. Van Vleck, Sidney Coleman, and Gerald Holton
In 1976 she talked with Sheldon Glashow, Norman Ramsey, Jabez Curry Street, and Edwin Kemble.

Publications

Books