Katheryn Edmonds Rajnak

Katheryn (Kathie) Marie Edmonds Rajnak (April 30, 1937  February 3, 2005) was an American theoretical physical chemist who lived and worked in the United States. She was known for her work applying variations of the Hartree–Fock approach to calculating the energy levels of the lanthanide elements and their compounds. Applications of those results include the design of lasers for inertial-confinement fusion and for uranium isotope separation. She was the first woman to teach physics at Kalamazoo College, starting in 1967.[2]

Katheryn Rajnak
Born
Katheryn Marie Edmonds

April 30, 1937
Kalamazoo, Michigan
DiedFebruary 3, 2005
Kalamazoo, Michigan
NationalityAmerican
Alma materKalamazoo College
University of California, Berkeley
Known forHartree–Fock calculations of the energy levels of lanthanide elements.
AwardsPhi Beta Kappa (1959)[1]
Clark Benedict Williams Prize in Mathematics (1959)[1]
National Science Foundation Scholarship (1959)
Honorary Woodrow Wilson Fellowship (1959)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysical chemistry
InstitutionsKalamazoo College
Western Michigan University
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory
Lawrence Livermore Laboratory
Paris-Sud University (Orsay)

Early life and education

Rajnak was born on April 30, 1937, in Kalamazoo, Michigan.[3][4] She attended Kalamazoo College, earning her bachelor's degree in chemistry in 1959, magna cum laude.[1][5] She defended her doctoral thesis, Configuration interaction in the rare earths and its effect on the stark levels of PrCl₃ and GdCl₃ · 6H₂O, at the University of California, Berkeley in November 1962, under the guidance of Brian R. Judd (known now for the Judd–Ofelt theory).[6]

Later life and career

Rajnak had a postdoctoral research appointment at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, from 1962 to 1965. She was a lecturer in Chemistry at Western Michigan University in 1966.[4] She relocated to Kalamazoo College when her husband gained a position there, where she was Assistant Professor of Physics in 1967–70. Other appointments at WMU and Kalamazoo followed, and she held a permanent part-time position at Kalamazoo from 1975.[4][5] Her final position was Adjunct Associate Professor of Physics at Kalamazoo, 1985–96.[4]

Rajnak retired in 1997.[3]

Research

Her research collaborations included sustained work with the Argonne National Laboratory (actinide chemistry group), from 1966; visiting researcher at Paris-Sud University (Orsay), spring quarters, 1987–91; Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (Theoretical Atomic and Molecular Physics and Laser Fusion groups), from 1973; and Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (Materials and Molecular Research Division), 1982–83. The Livermore work involved calculations related to laser isotope separation of Uranium and possible new solid-state lasers.[4]

Personal life

She was married to Stan Rajnak, a professor of mathematics at Kalamazoo College. The two had a hobby of collecting seaweed, and also collected oriental and local art.[7][5]

Rajnak died on February 3, 2005.[3]

References

  1. "Commencement". Kalamazoo Alumnus. Kalamazoo College. July 1959. pp. 2, 4–5. hdl:10920/29783.
  2. The Boiling Pot (Yearbook). Kalamazoo College. 1968. Photo, p. 185. hdl:10920/16179.
  3. "Katheryn M. Rajnak". Kalamazoo College. hdl:10920/38960.
  4. American Men & Women of Science 21st Edition, Volume 6 Q-S. Thomson Gale. 2003. p. 35.
  5. Wright, Wayne (March 4, 1993). "25th Anniversary Recognition: Katheryn Rajnak". Kalamazoo College. hdl:10920/38961.
  6. Rajnak, Katheryn Edmonds (November 1962). Configuration interaction in the rare earths and its effect on the stark levels of PrCl₃ and GdCl₃ · 6H₂O (Doctoral thesis). University of California, Berkeley. hdl:2027/mdp.39015077593195.
  7. "Rajnaks find beauty beneath the surface". Inside Kalamazoo College. Kalamazoo College. June 1994. pp. 1–2. hdl:10920/38949.
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