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{{Infobox scientist
{{Infobox scientist
|name = Cyril Domb
|name = Cyril Domb
|image = <!--(filename only)-->
|image =
|image_size = 300px
|image_size =
|caption =
|caption =
|birth_date = 9 December 1920
|birth_date = December 9, 1920
|birth_place = [[London]], [[UK]]
|birth_place = [[London]], [[UK]]
|death_date = 15 February 2012
|death_date = {{Death date and age|2012|02|15|1920|12|9}}
|death_place = [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]]
|death_place = [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]]
|residence = {{flag|UK}}</br>{{flag|Israel}}
|residence = {{flag|UK}}</br>{{flag|Israel}}
|citizenship =
|citizenship =
|nationality = {{flag|UK|name=British}}
|nationality = {{flag|UK|name=British}}
|ethnicity = Polish-Jewish
|ethnicity = Polish
|fields = [[Physicist]]
|fields = [[Theoretical physics]]</br>[[Critical phenomena]]
|workplaces = {{nowrap|[[Admiralty Signal Establishment]]}}</br>[[University of Cambridge]]</br>[[Oxford University]]</br>[[King's College London]]</br>[[Bar-Ilan University]]
|workplaces = {{nowrap|[[Admiralty Signal Establishment]]}}</br>[[University of Cambridge]]</br>[[Oxford University]]</br>[[King's College London]]</br>[[Bar-Ilan University]]
|alma_mater = [[Pembroke College, Cambridge]]
|alma_mater = [[Pembroke College, Cambridge]]
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|influences = [[Paul Dirac]]
|influences = [[Paul Dirac]]
|influenced =
|influenced =
|awards = [[Max Born prize]] (1982)
|awards = [[Max Born Prize]] (1981)
|religion =
|religion = Jewish
|signature = <!--(filename only)-->
|signature =
|footnotes =
|footnotes =
|spouse = Shirley Galinsky
}}
}}
'''Cyril Domb''' (9 December 1920 &ndash; 15 February 2012) was an internationally-recognized [[Theoretical physics|theoretical physicist]] best known for his lecturing and writing on the theory of [[phase transition]]s and [[critical phenomena]] of fluids. He was also known in the [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox Jewish]] world for his writings on Science and [[Judaism]].


==Early life==
'''Cyril Domb''' (9 December 1920 - 15 February 2012) was a [[physicist]] best known for his lecturing and writing on the theory of [[phase transition]]s and critical phenomena of fluids. He was also known in the [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox Jewish]] world for his writings on Science and [[Judaism]].
Domb was born on 9 December 1920, the fourth day of [[Hanukkah]], in North London to a [[Hasidic Judaism|Hasidic]] family.<ref name="tribute"/> His father, Yoel,<ref name="chabad">{{cite web |url=http://www.chabad.org/news/article_cdo/aid/1787865/jewish/Physicist-Bridged-Religion-and-Science.htm |last=Zaklikowski |first=Dovid |title= Acclaimed Physicist Cyril Domb, 91, Bridged Religion and Science|date=1 March 2012 |accessdate=7 April 2012|publisher=chabad.org}}</ref> who had shortened his name from Dombrowski to Domb, was a native of [[Warsaw]], while his mother, Sarah,<ref name="chabad"/> was from [[Oswiecin]], Poland.<ref name="tribute"/> He was given the [[Hebrew name]] of [[Yechiel]]. His father and grandfather paid for tutors to educate him in classical Jewish studies, and he also attended ''[[Shiur (Torah)|shiurim]]'' (Torah classes) given by Rabbi [[Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler]] to young men in a nearby [[synagogue]].<ref name="tribute">"An Appreciation of Professor Yechiel (Cyril) Domb, z"l, in honor of his shloshim". ''[[Hamodia]]'', 29 March 2012, pp. C14&ndash;C15. Retrieved 7 April 2012.</ref>


Domb possessed both an excellent memory and skill in [[mathematics]]. At the age of 17 he won a scholarship to [[Pembroke College, Cambridge]].<ref name="tribute"/> He graduated with a degree in mathematics in 1941.<ref name="chabad"/> He then joined the Admiralty Signal Establishment in [[Portsmouth]]<ref name="chabad"/> as one of several young scientists working on developing [[radar]] systems during World War II. Until that point, radar operators were able to determine the distance of an approaching object; Domb’s group worked out a method for determining the height of an object as well.<ref name="tribute"/><ref name="jp">{{cite web |url=http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=258524 |title= Cyril Domb, 91, combined science, Judaism |first=Jeremy |last=Sharon |date=20 February 2012 |accessdate=7 April 2012 |work=[[The Jerusalem Post]]}}</ref>
==Biography==
He was university lecturer in [[mathematics]] at [[Cambridge University]] between 1952 and 1954 and Professor of [[Theoretical Physics]] at [[King's College London]] between 1954 and 1981. Domb was Professor of Physics at [[Bar-Ilan University]] between 1981-89 and was [[Professor Emeritus]] there. He was also Academic President of the [[Jerusalem College of Technology]] [http://www.wzo.org.il/en/resources/expand_author.asp?id=292]. He was the recipient of the [[Max Born prize]] in 1981.


After the war, Domb attended [[Cambridge University]]. He earned his PhD in 1949 with a doctoral thesis on "Order-Disorder Statistics"; his doctoral advisor was [[Fred Hoyle]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=32921 |title=Cyril Domb |publisher=Mathematics Genealogy Project |accessdate=7 April 2012}}</ref>
He was President of the British [[Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists]]. Professor Domb at the behest of the [[Lubavitcher Rebbe]] began to compile articles designed at reconciling purported contradictions between science and Judaism. The fruits of this labor began the proceedings of the Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists and was published in the collections titled "Challenge". He resided with his wife Shirly in Israel together with their six children and numerous grandchildren.


==Academic career==
Cyril Domb studied at [[Hackney Downs School]] and [[Pembroke College, Cambridge]]; his Doctoral advisor was [[Fred Hoyle]] [http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=32921].
Domb was a university lecturer in mathematics at [[Cambridge University]] between 1952 and 1954 and professor of [[theoretical physics]] at [[King's College London]] between 1954 and 1981. In the latter position, he became the youngest professor in London at that time.<ref name="tribute"/>


In 1972 Domb began co-editing what would become a 20-volume series, ''Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena'', considered a classic in the field.<ref name="tribute"/> After the death of his first co-editor, [[Melville S. Green]], he worked with [[Joel Lebowitz]].<ref name="chabad"/>
His obituary was published on the Judaism Website [[Chabad.org]] [http://www.chabad.org/news/article_cdo/aid/1787865/jewish/Physicist-Bridged-Religion-and-Science.htm]. A shorter obituary was published in the [[Jerusalem Post]] [http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=258524].


==Science and religion==
==Works==
In the late 1950s, Domb helped found the British [[Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists]], based on the American model, and served as its president.<ref name="tribute"/>
'''On Science and Religion'''
*''Memories of Kopul Rosen'' ISBN 0950137200
*''Challenge- Torah views on science and its problems'' (editor with [[Aryeh Carmell]]) ISBN 0873061748
*''Maaser Kesafim'' (on [[tithe|tithing]]). ISBN 0-87306-304-x


Domb began writing his views reconciling the apparent contradictions between science and Judaism in 1961, when ''[[The Jewish Chronicle]]'' of London asked him for a 1000-word article on how Jewish teachings accord with the [[Big Bang]] and [[Steady State theory|Steady State]] [[physical cosmology|cosmological]] [[scientific theory|theories]]. This article gained the attention of the [[Menachem Mendel Schneerson|Lubavitcher Rebbe]], who began a correspondence with Domb and encouraged him to continue his efforts to show religious skeptics that there is no contradiction between science and such Torah concepts as the [[Genesis creation narrative]] and the [[Existence of God]].<ref name="chabad"/><ref name="jp"/> Unlike the Rebbe, Domb gave credence to the [[theory of evolution]], but held that this and other scientific theories were "only tentative summaries of our situation, whereas religion deals with what is right and what is wrong, and with many of the major driving forces in one’s life". Domb went on to publish a collection of articles on science and religion in "Challenge: Torah views on science and its problems" (1976), which he co-edited with Rabbi [[Aryeh Carmell]].<ref name="tribute"/>
'''Selected scientific publications'''

*Domb, C. 1949. "Order-disorder Statistics II. A two-dimensional model.” Proc. Roy. Soc. A199: 199-221
==Retirement==
In 1981, at the age of 60, Domb took [[early retirement]] from Kings College and made [[aliyah]] to Israel, settling in the [[Bayit Vegan]] neighborhood of Jerusalem.<ref name="tribute"/> Between 1981 and 1989 he was professor of physics at [[Bar-Ilan University]], boosting the prestige of the department and attracting leading physicists and students to it. In keeping with his interests in [[Torah study]], he opened each staff meeting with a [[Dvar Torah]] (Torah thought), started a [[Daf Yomi]] ''shiur'' after afternoon prayers, and founded an academic journal, ''Journal of Torah and Scholarship''.<ref name="tribute"/> He was also a visiting professor at the [[University of Maryland]], [[Yeshiva University]], [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]], and [[Weizmann Institute of Science]],<ref name="jp"/> and academic president of Machon Lev, the [[Jerusalem College of Technology]].<ref name="tribute"/>

In October 2011, the ''[[Journal of Statistical Physics]]'' published a tribute issue to Domb, commemorating his influence on the field of [[statistical physics]].<ref>{{cite journal|title=Introduction |journal=Journal of Statistical Physics |year=2011 |volume=145 |doi=10.1007/s10955-011-0379-4}}</ref>

==Personal==
Domb married Shirley Galinsky in 1957; they had six children.<ref name="chabad"/>

==Honors and awards==
*[[List of Fellows of the Royal Society|Fellow of the Royal Society]], 1977.<ref name="tribute"/>
*[[Max Born Prize]], 1981.

==Works==
===Selected scientific publications===
*Domb, C. 1949. "Order-Disorder Statistics II. A two-dimensional model.” Proc. Roy. Soc. A199: 199-221
*Domb, C. 1960. “On the Theory of Cooperative Phenomena. “Adv. Phys., Phil. Mag. S9: 149-361
*Domb, C. 1960. “On the Theory of Cooperative Phenomena. “Adv. Phys., Phil. Mag. S9: 149-361
*Domb, C. and Sykes, M.F. 1961. “Use of Series Expansions for the Ising Model Susceptibility and Excluded Volume Problem.” J. Math. Phys. 2: 63-67
*Domb, C. and Sykes, M.F. 1961. “Use of Series Expansions for the Ising Model Susceptibility and Excluded Volume Problem.” J. Math. Phys. 2: 63-67
*Domb, C. and Green, M.S., Eds. 1972-1976. “Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena,” Vols. 1-6, London: Academic Press.
*Domb, C. and Green, M.S., Eds. 1972-1976. “Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena,” Vols. 1-6, London: Academic Press.
*Domb, C. and Lebowitz, J.L., Eds. 1983-1994. “Phase Transitions and Critical Behavior,” Vols. 6-16, London: Academic Press
*Domb, C. and Lebowitz, J.L., Eds. 1983-2000. “Phase Transitions and Critical Behavior,” Vols. 6-20, London: Academic Press.
*{{cite book |url=http://books.google.co.il/books?id=wT_KjMJbrQwC&dq=advances+in+physics+domb&hl=en&sa=X&ei=VpmAT9DvJ-mj0QWd-P2aBw&ved=0CFMQ6AEwBg |title= The Critical Point: A historical introduction to the modern theory of critical phenomena|publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=1996 |isbn= 074840435X}}
*Domb, C. 1996 The Critical Point: A Historical Introduction to the Modern Theory of Critical Phenomena.” London: Taylor & Francis

===Torah works===
*{{cite book |url=http://books.google.co.il/books?id=YdgPAQAAIAAJ&q=cyril+domb&dq=cyril+domb&hl=en&sa=X&ei=w5iAT5rJHYqt0QWN4q3sBg&redir_esc=y |title=Memories of Kopul Rosen |year=1970 |publisher=Carmel College |isbn=0950137200}}
*{{cite book|title=Challenge: Torah views on science and its problems |year=1976 |publisher=Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists |url=http://books.google.co.il/books?id=sQsmAQAAIAAJ&dq=cyril%20domb&source=gbs_book_other_versions |isbn=0873061748}} (co-edited with [[Aryeh Carmell]]); 2nd edition published by [[Feldheim Publishers|Feldheim]] in 2000<ref>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.co.il/books?id=5fMBnHUiwukC&dq=cyril+domb&source=gbs_navlinks_s |title= Challenge: Torah views on science and its problems|year=2000 |edition=2nd |publisher=[[Feldheim Publishers]] |isbn= 158330424X}}</ref>
*{{cite book |url= http://books.google.co.il/books?id=9xAMt6SW0RMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=cyril+domb&hl=en&sa=X&ei=KZaAT7HwLMO80QW8if2TBw&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=cyril%20domb&f=false |title=Maaser Kesafim: Giving a tenth to charity |isbn=0-87306-304-x}} (2nd edition published by Feldheim, 1982)


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Jewish_views_on_evolution#Modern_day_Orthodox_Jewish_views|Modern day Orthodox Jewish views on evolution]]
*[[Jewish_views_on_evolution#Modern_day_Orthodox_Jewish_views|Modern day Orthodox Jewish views on evolution]]
*Prominent Orthodox physicists:
*Prominent Orthodox Jewish physicists:
**[[Nathan Aviezer]]
**[[Nathan Aviezer]]
**[[Herman Branover]]
**[[Herman Branover]]
Line 65: Line 85:
**[[Gerald Schroeder]]
**[[Gerald Schroeder]]


==External links==
==References==
{{reflist}}
* [http://authors.library.caltech.edu/5456/1/hrst.mit.edu/hrs/renormalization/Domb/index.htm Domb interview]


==External links==
* [http://authors.library.caltech.edu/5456/1/hrst.mit.edu/hrs/renormalization/Domb/index.htm Cyril Domb Interview, June 2002]
* [http://www.springerlink.com/content/8481g14718x76p37/ Cyril Domb: A Personal View and Appreciation by [[Michael E. Fisher]]]
* [http://www.springerlink.com/content/8481g14718x76p37/ Cyril Domb: A Personal View and Appreciation by [[Michael E. Fisher]]]


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| NAME = Domb, Cyril
| NAME = Domb, Cyril
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Physicist
| DATE OF BIRTH = 9 December 1920
| DATE OF BIRTH = 9 December 1920
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[London]], [[UK]]
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[London]], [[UK]]
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}}
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Domb, Cyril}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Domb, Cyril}}
[[Category:1920 births]]
[[Category:Orthodox Jewish scientists]]
[[Category:Jewish physicists]]
[[Category:British physicists]]
[[Category:Academics of the University of Cambridge]]
[[Category:Academics of the University of Cambridge]]
[[Category:Alumni of Pembroke College, Cambridge]]
[[Category:Alumni of Pembroke College, Cambridge]]
[[Category:Academics of King's College London]]
[[Category:Academics of King's College London]]
[[Category:English Jews]]
[[Category:Jewish physicists]]
[[Category:British physicists]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society]]
[[Category:Israeli academics]]
[[Category:Israeli academics]]
[[Category:Israeli physicists]]
[[Category:Israeli physicists]]
[[Category:Orthodox Jewish scientists]]
[[Category:British Orthodox Jews]]
[[Category:British Orthodox Jews]]
[[Category:Israeli Orthodox Jews]]
[[Category:Israeli Orthodox Jews]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:English Jews]]
[[Category:Israeli Jews]]
[[Category:Israeli Jews]]
[[Category:Jerusalem College of Technology]]
[[Category:Jerusalem College of Technology]]
[[Category:Judaism and science]]
[[Category:Judaism and science]]
[[Category:1920 births]]
[[Category:2012 deaths]]



{{UK-physicist-stub}}
{{Israel-scientist-stub}}


[[de:Cyril Domb]]
[[de:Cyril Domb]]

Revision as of 20:52, 7 April 2012

Cyril Domb
BornDecember 9, 1920
DiedFebruary 15, 2012(2012-02-15) (aged 91)
Nationality British
Alma materPembroke College, Cambridge
Known forGillis–Domb–Fisher random walk
Domb–Sykes plot
SpouseShirley Galinsky
AwardsMax Born Prize (1981)
Scientific career
FieldsTheoretical physics
Critical phenomena
InstitutionsAdmiralty Signal Establishment
University of Cambridge
Oxford University
King's College London
Bar-Ilan University
Doctoral advisorFred Hoyle
Other academic advisorsRobert Stoneley
Doctoral studentsRoger Bowers
Michael Fisher
Renfrey Potts
George Bell

Cyril Domb (9 December 1920 – 15 February 2012) was an internationally-recognized theoretical physicist best known for his lecturing and writing on the theory of phase transitions and critical phenomena of fluids. He was also known in the Orthodox Jewish world for his writings on Science and Judaism.

Early life

Domb was born on 9 December 1920, the fourth day of Hanukkah, in North London to a Hasidic family.[1] His father, Yoel,[2] who had shortened his name from Dombrowski to Domb, was a native of Warsaw, while his mother, Sarah,[2] was from Oswiecin, Poland.[1] He was given the Hebrew name of Yechiel. His father and grandfather paid for tutors to educate him in classical Jewish studies, and he also attended shiurim (Torah classes) given by Rabbi Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler to young men in a nearby synagogue.[1]

Domb possessed both an excellent memory and skill in mathematics. At the age of 17 he won a scholarship to Pembroke College, Cambridge.[1] He graduated with a degree in mathematics in 1941.[2] He then joined the Admiralty Signal Establishment in Portsmouth[2] as one of several young scientists working on developing radar systems during World War II. Until that point, radar operators were able to determine the distance of an approaching object; Domb’s group worked out a method for determining the height of an object as well.[1][3]

After the war, Domb attended Cambridge University. He earned his PhD in 1949 with a doctoral thesis on "Order-Disorder Statistics"; his doctoral advisor was Fred Hoyle.[4]

Academic career

Domb was a university lecturer in mathematics at Cambridge University between 1952 and 1954 and professor of theoretical physics at King's College London between 1954 and 1981. In the latter position, he became the youngest professor in London at that time.[1]

In 1972 Domb began co-editing what would become a 20-volume series, Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena, considered a classic in the field.[1] After the death of his first co-editor, Melville S. Green, he worked with Joel Lebowitz.[2]

Science and religion

In the late 1950s, Domb helped found the British Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists, based on the American model, and served as its president.[1]

Domb began writing his views reconciling the apparent contradictions between science and Judaism in 1961, when The Jewish Chronicle of London asked him for a 1000-word article on how Jewish teachings accord with the Big Bang and Steady State cosmological theories. This article gained the attention of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, who began a correspondence with Domb and encouraged him to continue his efforts to show religious skeptics that there is no contradiction between science and such Torah concepts as the Genesis creation narrative and the Existence of God.[2][3] Unlike the Rebbe, Domb gave credence to the theory of evolution, but held that this and other scientific theories were "only tentative summaries of our situation, whereas religion deals with what is right and what is wrong, and with many of the major driving forces in one’s life". Domb went on to publish a collection of articles on science and religion in "Challenge: Torah views on science and its problems" (1976), which he co-edited with Rabbi Aryeh Carmell.[1]

Retirement

In 1981, at the age of 60, Domb took early retirement from Kings College and made aliyah to Israel, settling in the Bayit Vegan neighborhood of Jerusalem.[1] Between 1981 and 1989 he was professor of physics at Bar-Ilan University, boosting the prestige of the department and attracting leading physicists and students to it. In keeping with his interests in Torah study, he opened each staff meeting with a Dvar Torah (Torah thought), started a Daf Yomi shiur after afternoon prayers, and founded an academic journal, Journal of Torah and Scholarship.[1] He was also a visiting professor at the University of Maryland, Yeshiva University, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Weizmann Institute of Science,[3] and academic president of Machon Lev, the Jerusalem College of Technology.[1]

In October 2011, the Journal of Statistical Physics published a tribute issue to Domb, commemorating his influence on the field of statistical physics.[5]

Personal

Domb married Shirley Galinsky in 1957; they had six children.[2]

Honors and awards

Works

Selected scientific publications

  • Domb, C. 1949. "Order-Disorder Statistics II. A two-dimensional model.” Proc. Roy. Soc. A199: 199-221
  • Domb, C. 1960. “On the Theory of Cooperative Phenomena. “Adv. Phys., Phil. Mag. S9: 149-361
  • Domb, C. and Sykes, M.F. 1961. “Use of Series Expansions for the Ising Model Susceptibility and Excluded Volume Problem.” J. Math. Phys. 2: 63-67
  • Domb, C. and Green, M.S., Eds. 1972-1976. “Phase Transitions and Critical Phenomena,” Vols. 1-6, London: Academic Press.
  • Domb, C. and Lebowitz, J.L., Eds. 1983-2000. “Phase Transitions and Critical Behavior,” Vols. 6-20, London: Academic Press.
  • The Critical Point: A historical introduction to the modern theory of critical phenomena. Taylor & Francis. 1996. ISBN 074840435X.

Torah works

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "An Appreciation of Professor Yechiel (Cyril) Domb, z"l, in honor of his shloshim". Hamodia, 29 March 2012, pp. C14–C15. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Zaklikowski, Dovid (1 March 2012). "Acclaimed Physicist Cyril Domb, 91, Bridged Religion and Science". chabad.org. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Sharon, Jeremy (20 February 2012). "Cyril Domb, 91, combined science, Judaism". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  4. ^ "Cyril Domb". Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
  5. ^ "Introduction". Journal of Statistical Physics. 145. 2011. doi:10.1007/s10955-011-0379-4.
  6. ^ Challenge: Torah views on science and its problems (2nd ed.). Feldheim Publishers. 2000. ISBN 158330424X.

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