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pacing the void

By Jennifer Sterba
Arizona Summer Wildcat
August 6, 1997

Prominent UA physics professor dies at 61


[photograph]


Arizona Daily Wildcat

Peter Carruthers


Peter Carruthers, a UA physics professor and former physics department head, died Sunday at his Tucson home after suffering liver disease for more than 10 years. He was 61.

Carruthers was a multi-talented artist as well as a physicist. He had two art shows earlier this year in Tucson displaying several of his 800 watercolors.

"He branched out a lot as he got older," said his wife, Lucy Carruthers.

Peter Carruthers was also an avid trout fisherman for 30 years and wrote a book on fly-fishing, which will be published later this summer. He also wrote more than 1,000 poems, some of which are being translated for a bilingual book to be released soon in Romania.

In addition, Carruthers was a musician, playing both the piano and the violin. But an automobile injury in September 1995 left him unable to continue practicing the violin, Lucy Carruthers said.

Carruthers came to the UA in 1986 as the physics department head to pursue the construction of a multi-billion dollar federal science project, the Super-conducting Super Collider (SSC).

"He had lots of research interests," said Robert Thews, Professor Emeritus of Physics.

Carruthers' most recent research at the UA involved high energy physics and elementary particles. His job was to hire new, good faculty when he first came to UA, Thews said.

He hired 16 faculty members by the time he stepped down as department head in 1992.

"I'm going to remember him as somebody who really liked his work and was instrumental in bringing out the best in people within the department," Thews said.

He is listed in New York Times Magazine as "a thinker pushing the frontiers of knowledge." Carruthers researched topics in theoretical physics, from condensed matter, quantum optics and particle physics to relative nuclear physics and complexity.

Carruthers is listed in American Men and Women of Science, Who's Who in Frontiers of Science and Technology, and Who's Who in America.

Carruthers was born in Lafayette, Ind., but grew up in Middletown, Iowa.

He obtained both a bachelor's and master's of science degrees in physics from the Carnegie Institute of Technology.

Carruthers received his doctorate in physics from Cornell University in 1961. There, he became the youngest tenured professor of physics at the age of 28.

He left Cornell in 1973 to direct the Theoretical Division at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and came to the University of Arizona in 1986.

In addition to his wife, Carruthers is survived by three children, Kathrin Daniels, 36, Norfolk, Va.; Debra, 40, Espanola, N.M.; and Peter, 42, Ithaca, N.Y.; and one grandson, Michael, 7, Ithaca, N.Y.

A memorial service will be held the last week of August at the Aspen Physics Center. A fund in his memory will be established to benefit the Aspen Physics Center Library, 700 West Gillespie St., Aspen, Colo., 81611.


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