Theodore Holstein


Theodore "Ted" David Holstein was an American theoretical physicist.
Holstein studied at New York University, earning a Bachelor's degree in 1935 a PhD in 1940. His thesis Passage of Neutrons through Ferromagnetic Materials was supervised by Otto Halpern. His Master's degree was earned at Columbia University in 1936. From 1941 he worked in a research lab at Westinghouse Electric Corporation. In 1960, he left Westinghouse and became a professor at the University of Pittsburgh. In 1965 he became a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles.
With Henry Primakoff in 1940 he introduced the Holstein-Primakoff transformation. It is important for the theory of spin waves.
His most notable contribution to atomic physics was in 1947 when he was the first to treat the capture of resonance radiation in gases correctly.
Other significant papers included the polaron, infrared absorption of metals, a microscopic theory of the collision drag phenomenon by Brian Pippard, Bloch Electrons in magnetic fields and his review on the transport properties in an electron-phonon gas. He corrected the Förster-Dexter theory of photoinduced energy transfer between molecules and found new mechanisms for energy transfer in disordered systems.
He became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the National Academy of Sciences in 1976 and 1981, respectively.