College of Engineering
College of LAS
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Department of Physics at the U of I

Physics Illinois

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

my.physics | contact us

Information For:

MoreUndergraduates
  • Why Physics Illinois?
  • How Do I Apply?
  • Curricula/Programs
  • Advising
  • Awards and Prizes
  • Research Opportunities
  • Student Organizations
  • Physically Speaking (Blog)
  • Convocation
MoreGraduates
  • Why Physics Illinois?
  • How Do I Apply?
  • Degree Requirements
  • Grad Student Blog
  • Qual Information
  • Research
  • Awards and Prizes
  • Student Organizations
  • Thesis Templates
  • Travel Fund Application
MoreAlumni
  • Physics Illinois Newsletter
  • UI Alumni Association
  • ESAA
  • Ways to Give
  • Order Transcripts
  • Keep in Touch
MoreCorporate Partners
  • Connect
MoreSchool Partners
  • Links for Teachers
  • PER

Information About:

MoreCourses
  • Course Listing
  • Proficiency Exams
  • Final Exam Schedule
  • Textbook Lists
  • Course Tutors
MoreResearch
  • Research Areas
  • REU Program
  • Facilities
  • Publications
  • Physics Library
  • Thesis Templates
MorePeople
  • Directory
  • Excellent Teachers
  • Service Areas and Offices
  • Nobel Laureates
  • McMillan Award
  • In Memoriam
MoreCommunity Outreach
  • Links for Teachers
  • Physics Van
  • Fans of Physics Illinois
  • Saturday Physics (SPE)
  • Science on the Market
  • The Whys Guy
  • Undergrad Office Outreach
  • EnLiST
MoreCalendar of Events
  • Academic Calendar
  • Weekly Schedule
  • Monthly Schedule
  • Physics Colloquium
  • Physics Careers
  • Physics Seminars
MoreIn the News
  • News Stories
MoreGiving
  • Make a Gift
  • Ways to Give
  • Endowments
MorePhysics Illinois
  • Department Head Message
  • Excellent Teachers
  • History of Excellence
  • Nobel Laureates
  • Bardeen Prize
  • McMillan Award
  • Job Openings
  • Videos
  • How to Find Us

Follow Physics Illinois on Twitter  Follow Physics Illinois on Facebook  Subscribe to Physics Illinois RSS feed

Now hiring faculty

Ask The Van

I am a sceptic of relativity theory and am trying to become a believer. As far as I know (about this theory), time slows down when some one travels at the speed of light. What about blind people ? Will this effect happen for them as well ?.. I am curious because blind people have nothing to do with light.

View the answer

New and Exciting Physics
 

William L. McMillan

1936-1984

William L. McMillan
William L. McMillan

William L. McMillan, known as Bill to his many friends, was one of the most creative and distinguished members of the Physics Department of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is noted for his basic and unique contributions to many areas of condensed matter physics, including liquid helium, superconductivity, liquid crystals, layer compounds, spin glasses, and localization phenomena. In many of these areas, he made novel applications of computer techniques to obtain increased physical understanding of complex many-body systems.

McMillan was born January 13, 1936, in Little Rock, Arkansas. He died at age 49, at the peak of his productivity. During the past year, he had more than a dozen papers published or in the process of publication.

He held a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering and a master's degree in physics from the University of Arkansas, which also awarded him an honorary degree in 1979. He received a doctorate in physics from the University of Illinois in 1964, with a thesis on the ground state of liquid helium, in which he made an early application of Monte Carlo techniques.

After graduation, he went to Bell Labs, where he and John Rowell did their famous work on deriving phonon spectra in superconductors from electron tunneling data. On a year's leave at Cavendish Laboratory and at Orsay, he began a study of liquid crystals, using a Landau-type theory to analyze the various phase transitions, and carried out experiments to confirm predictions of the theory. He returned to Illinois as Professor of Physics in 1972, when he was still interested in liquid crystals. In 1978-79, he spent a sabbatical working with Professor P. deGennes at Orsay.

An outgrowth of his work on liquid crystals was his theory that discommensurations and commensurate-incommensurate charge density were transitions to 2D layer compounds. This theory is basic to much of the subsequent work in the field. More recently, using in part a novel computer he designed and built himself, he and his students made use of powerful computer techniques to study localization, the metal-insulator transition, Ising models, and other problems of statistical physics.

For this work, he developed a new macroscopic renormalization group method in which macroscopic quantities (conductivity, susceptibility, density of states, etc.) are kept fixed as the lattice parameter is varied. This method should have many other applications in the future.

McMillan received the 1978 Fritz London Award for his work with Rowell on phonon spectra in superconductors. His many contributions have been recognized by election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1982 and to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1983.

John Bardeen (University of Illinois)

National Academy of Sciences Biography
Biography by P.W. Anderson (PDF)

Scholars

  • Peter Axel
    1923-1983
  • John Bardeen
    1908-1991
  • James H. Bartlett
    1904-2000
  • Frederick C. Brown
    1924-2011
  • Richard Brown
    1924-2009
  • Robert M. Clegg
    1945-2012
  • Harry G. Drickamer
    1918-2002
  • Laura B. Eisenstein
    1942-1985
  • Donald M. Ginsberg
    1933-2007
  • Paul Handler
    1929-1998
  • Alfred O. Hanson
    1923-2005
  • Lorella M. Jones
    1943-1995
  • James S. Koehler
    1914-2006
  • Leo S. Lavatelli
    1917-1998
  • David Lazarus
    1921-2011
  • F. Wheeler Loomis
    1889-1976
  • Ernest M. Lyman
    1910-1990
  • Robert J. Maurer
    1913-1995
  • William L. McMillan
    1936-1984
  • Vijay R. Pandharipande
    1940-2006
  • Clark S. Robinson
    1917-1998
  • Frederick Seitz
    1911-2008
  • Albert Wattenberg
    1917-2007

© 2013 The Board of Trustees at the University of Illinois   |   Department of Physics   |   College of Engineering   |   University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Department of Physics    1110 West Green Street   Urbana, IL 61801-3080

Physics Library   |   Contact Us   |   My.Physics   |   Privacy Statement   |   Copyright Statement