<http://www.nytimes.com/2001/08/22/obituaries/22HOYL.html>

AUG 22, 2001

Fred Hoyle Dies at 86; Opposed 'Big Bang' but Named It

By WALTER SULLIVAN

Sir Fred Hoyle, one of the most creative and provocative astrophysicists of 
the last half century, who helped explain how the heavier elements were 
formed and gave the name Big Bang, meant to be derisive, to the theory of 
cosmic origin he vehemently opposed, died on Monday in Bournemouth, 
England. He was 86 and lived in Bournemouth.

He suffered a severe stroke last month and never recovered, said Dr. 
Geoffrey Burbidge, an astrophysicist at the University of California at San 
Diego who had collaborated with Dr. Hoyle on many research projects.

"Fred was probably the most creative and original person in astrophysics 
after World War II," Dr. Burbidge said.

Dr. Virginia Trimble, an astrophysicist at the University of California at 
Irvine, said that Dr. Hoyle's opposition to the Big Bang, while considered 
a mistake, "was significant in that it went a long way toward making 
cosmology a true science" in which competing theories were tested by 
observations.

A versatile scientist brimming with ideas and a lifelong rebel eager for 
intellectual combat, Dr. Hoyle was most widely known as an author of the 
cosmological theory, which now has few adherents, that the universe exists 
in a steady state. The theory, published in 1948, contends that matter is 
constantly being created, so the expanding universe remains roughly the 
same at all times and has no beginning or end.

In a series of popular radio talks in Britain in the 1940's, he coined "big 
bang" to ridicule the rival concept of an explosive origin of the universe, 
but the term is now widely used and the explosion theory is generally 
accepted. In recent years Sir Fred joined those arguing for a universe that 
� while eternal � expands and contracts.

The astronomer was instrumental in establishing the Institute of 
Theoretical Astronomy at the University of Cambridge in
England and became its first director. From 1958 to 1972 he was also 
Plumian professor of astronomy at the university, a post previously held by 
such leading scientists as Sir Arthur Eddington, whose groundbreaking 
experiments confirmed the general theory of relativity.

A historic development in astrophysics was explaining how the elements came 
to be synthesized step by step in the stars, starting from hydrogen and 
helium. In the 1930's, Dr. Hans Bethe and others showed how stars could 
derive their energy from the fusion of hydrogen nuclei (protons) to form 
helium.

The problem Dr. Hoyle and colleagues faced was how slightly larger elements 
like carbon, nitrogen and oxygen were formed by stars. An element called 
beryllium-8, which was an intermediate stage in the process of element 
formation, stood in the way.  It did not survive long enough for the fusion 
process to reach carbon-12, the next stage in the element building process.

Dr. Hoyle solved the problem: he pressed nuclear physicists to look for a 
special state of carbon-12, that was stable enough for the fusion of 
heavier elements to occur.

Then, working with three other scientists, Dr. Hoyle figured out how all 
the heavier elements could have been formed. Their historic paper was 
published in 1957 in Reviews of Modern Physics. In addition to Dr. Hoyle, 
the scientists were Dr. William A. Fowler, ofCalifornia Institute of 
Technology; Dr. Burbidge and Dr. Margaret Burbidge, his wife.

While the formation of the lighter elements, up to iron, could be explained 
by processes inside stars, extremely high
temperatures and violent events were needed. The answer proposed by the 
four was the supernova, in which a giant star collapses to extreme density, 
then cataclysmically rebounds.

For this and his subsequent work in astrophysics, Dr. Fowler was awarded 
the Nobel Prize in Physics. The other three were omitted, probably in part 
because the prize is rarely, if ever, awarded to more than two people.

Fred Hoyle's noncomformity manifested itself at an early age. Born in 
Bingley, Yorkshire, he found school boring, preferring to remain at home 
studying a textbook in elementary chemistry and doing chemistry experiments 
with equipment he found in his home. As recounted in his 1994 
autobiography, "Home Is Where the Wind Blows," in his parents' absence he 
enjoyed making gunpowder and creating explosions.

As school was compulsory, his absence led to difficulties with the local 
authorities. The family did not have the funds to send him to a private 
school, but he finally won scholarships, including one from the West Riding 
of Yorkshire, and started on the path that eventually led him to Cambridge.

As soon as he reached Cambridge he came under the tutelage of such top 
physicists as Rudolph Peierls, Eddington, P. A. M. Dirac and R. H. Fowler, 
whose calculations set the stage for the concept of black holes, stars 
whose collapse has yielded such density that the gravity prevents even 
light from escaping.

During World War II he led a radar development group at an Admiralty Signal 
Establishment center in West Sussex, near the south coast. Working under 
him were two refugees from Vienna: Thomas Gold and Hermann Bondi. During 
the day the trio worked on radar. At night they discussed astrophysics, 
developing the steady-state cosmology. They accepted the evidence for its 
constant expansion, but proposed that matter is constantly formed to fill 
the gaps. In 1995 Dr. Bondi and Dr. Gold credited Dr. Hoyle with first 
proposing such continuous creation of new matter.

Dr. John Faulkner, of the Lick Observatory in California, said that during 
the "magical six years" after establishment of the Institute of Theoretical 
Astronomy at Cambridge in 1966, it became "an obligatory mecca" for young 
American astronomers, many of whom felt the institute "fostered their best 
work."

But by his own account Sir Fred never shrank from controversy, and in 1972, 
after a falling out with Cambridge officialdom and rancorous debate on the 
future of British astronomy, he resigned as director of the institute.

Sir Fred's work on interstellar organic molecules led him to propose that 
life originated in space. Working with a student,
Chandra Wickramasinghe, he championed the unorthodox theory that the seeds 
of life, including disease viruses, periodically fall from space.

They attributed the onset of various epidemics to such viruses, attempting 
to document this in the simultaneous appearance of influenza at schools in 
remote parts of England and Wales.

These theories are reflected in titles of the books he did with Dr. 
Wickramasinghe: "Lifecloud" (1958), "Diseases from Space" (1979), "Space 
Travelers: The Origins of Life" (1980) and "Cosmic Life Force" (1988). His 
more conventional writing produced "Frontiers of Astronomy," a widely used 
text.

Dr. Hoyle, along with Dr. Geoffrey Burbidge and Dr. Jayant V. Narliker, 
renewed their fight against Big Bang orthodoxy with the book "A Different 
Approach to Cosmology" (Cambridge University Press, 2000).

Dr. Hoyle was also a prolific author of science fiction, producing almost 
one book a year between 1950 and 1990, some written with his son, Geoffrey. 
Among the best known were "The Black Cloud" (1957) and "Ossian's Ride" (1958).

In 1957 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society and in the early 
1970's he was president of the Royal Astronomical
Society. He was knighted in 1972.

In recent years he lived in Bournemouth. In addition to his son, also of 
Bournemouth, he is survived by his wife, the former Barbara Clark, whom he 
married in 1939, and a daughter Elizabeth Butler, a London stockbroker.

"Home for Hoyle," Stephen G. Brush, a science historian, wrote in 1995, "is 
not a cozy cottage with an overstuffed chair in front of the fireplace. Not 
for him the comforts of academic tenure and the polite respect of 
colleagues. He is at home on the tops of mountains, at the cusps of 
controversies, where the winds blow fiercely and even God is not omnipotent 
but, as Hoyle says, just `doing his best' to make an adequate universe."


Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company




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