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National Museum of Nuclear Science & History

Peter Lax is a Hungarian-born American mathematician.

Lax and his family left Hungary for America in 1941, just days before Pearl Harbor. In 1944, Lax was drafted into the Army. He worked on the Manhattan Project, first at Oak Ridge and then at Los Alamos, as a member of the Special Engineer Detachment.

Lax began at Los Alamos as a calculator operator, then proceeded to help with higher-level math. He worked under physicist Robert Serber in the Theoretical Physics Division and on issues of neutron transport with Enrico Fermi (whom he recalls beating in tennis).

After the war, Lax earned a Ph.D. in math and went on to a dazzling career as a mathematician, winning many prizes and making major contributions to the fields of pure and applied mathematics on topics such as scattering theory and shock waves. In 1987, he was awarded the prestigious Wolf Prize in Mathematics. In 2005, he won the Abel Prize, the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for mathematicians.

Lax is currently a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University.

Peter Lax's Timeline
1926 May 1st Born in Budapest, Hungary.
1941 Nov 15th Lax and his family left Hungary for the United States.
1944 May Drafted into the Army.
1944 May1945 Worked on the Manhattan Project at Oak Ridge, TN and Los Alamos, NM.
1949 Received his Ph.D. in mathematics from NYU.
1987 Awarded the Wolf Prize.
2005 Won the Abel Prize.

Peter Lax playing tennis

Peter Lax with his son James

Peter Lax in Central Park

Peter Lax and his wife Anneli Cahn Lax

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