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Leigh Page
American theoretical physicist
Leigh Page (October 13, 1884 – September 14, 1952) was an American theoretical physicist. Chairman of Mathematical Physics at the Sloane Physics Laboratory of Yale University for over three decades, he is the namesake of Yale's Leigh Page Prize Lectures.
Biography
Page was born October 13, 1884, in South Orange, New Jersey to Edward Day Page and Cornelia Lee.[1][2] He came to the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale in 1909 as an assistant professor in drawing and graduate student under Henry Andrews Bumstead.
Leigh hunt wifeHe switched to physics in 1912, was appointed assistant professor of physics in 1916. He published a survey of "A Century's Progress in Physics" in 1918,[3] and became professor of mathematical physics in 1922, where he remained until his death in 1952.
Devoting most of his time to teaching, Page conducted research and wrote several textbooks, which appeared in various editions, often with