The cosmology community has had a terrible few months.
I am saddened to report the passing of Andrew Lange, a physicist from CalTech and one of the world’s preeminent experimental cosmologists. Among many other accomplishments, Andrew was one of the leaders of the Boomerang experiment, which made the first large-scale map of the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation with a resolution of less than one degree, sufficient to see the opposing action of gravity and pressure in the gas of the early Universe, and to use that to measure the overall density of matter, among many other cosmological properties. He has since been an important leader in a number of other experiments, notably the Planck Surveyor satellite and the Spider balloon-borne telescope, currently being developed to become one of the most sensitive CMB experiments ever built.
I learned about this tragedy on the same day that people are gathering in Berkeley, California, to mourn the passing of another experimental cosmologist, Huan Tran of Berkeley. Huan was an excellent young scientist, most recently deeply involved in the development of PolarBear, another one of the current generation of ultra-sensitive CMB experiments. Huan lead the development of the PolarBear telescope itself, currently being tested in the mountains of California, but to be deployed for real science on the Atacama plane in Chile. We on the PolarBear team are proud to name the PolarBear telescope after Huan Tran, a token of our esteem for him, and a small tribute to his memory.
My thoughts go out to the friends and family of both Huan and Andrew. I, and many others, will miss them both.
2 responses to “Andrew Lange, Huan Tran”
Wow. This is really sad news.
Huan’s memorial service was lovely, by the way. I was sad to have missed the funeral in Minnesota last month, but Adrian and Celeste did a great job with the Bay Area memorial. It was a sad personal coincidence that I learned of Andrew’s passing in my hotel room here in Berkeley, which I rented to attend Huan’s memorial. I found out from the Cosmic Variance post.