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Photo 1999
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Fred Kocks (born Ulrich F. Kocks in Germany, in 1929)
received a degree of Diplom Physiker in the Department of Theoretical
Physics (under Richard Becker) in Göttingen, in 1954, and then emigrated
to the USA. He received a Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Harvard University
in 1959 (under the guidance of Bruce Chalmers) and then spent six further
years there, on the faculty of the Division of Engineering and Applied
Physics. One of his lasting interests, since then, has been the relation
between the mechanical behavior of metal single crystals and their polycrystalline
aggregates.
In 1962, Kocks became a U.S. citizen, formalizing his name as “Ulrich
Fred Kocks” (usually using the abbreviation “U. F. Kocks”).
In 1964, he spent a sabbatical at the Technical University of Munich,
which resulted in the publication of his seminal research “Statistical
Theory of Flow Stress and Work Hardening” [Phil. Mag. 1966].
In 1965, he was invited to form a Group for Mechanical Properties at Argonne
National Laboratory near Chicago, where he collaborated with many successful
researchers from all over the world. (Fred’s wife, Marianne, was
instrumental in establishing, at Argonne, the Host Committee for Foreign
Visitors.) The experimental work concentrated on solid-solution alloys,
particularly Dynamic Strain Aging. With co-authors Ali Argon (MIT) and
Mike Ashby (then at Harvard University), a monograph on “The Thermodynamics
and Kinetics of Slip” was written [Prog. Mater. Sci. 19, 1975],
followed by “The Kinetics of Non-Uniform Deformation” [Prog.
Mater. Sci. Chalmers Anniversary Volume, 1981]. With organization of the
Gordon Conference in Physical Metallurgy in 1977, Fred’s interest
turned to high-temperature deformation and metal “creep,”
as well as to interaction with the geophysics community.
Fred Kocks has held guest professorships at the Technische Hochschule
Aachen, Germany (1971/72, 1979); at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada
(1978); and at McGill University in Montreal, Canada (1982).
In 1983, Kocks became a founding member of the Center for Materials Science
at Los Alamos National Laboratory where, again, the collaboration with
many internal and external scientists formed the core of his activities.
Joint programs with Prof. Rudy Wenk (Berkeley) led to an integration of
the physics of metals and rocks. Two software programs were developed
and freely distributed by LANL: popLA, for texture analysis and representation;
and LApp, for the simulation of polycrystal plasticity. In 1998, a book
was published on “Texture and Anisotropy” by Kocks, Tomé
and Wenk, with further contributors [Cambridge University Press]. Kocks
and Mecking summarized their long-term collaboration on the “Physics
and Phenomenology of Strain Hardening” in Prog.Mater.Sci. 48(3),
published in 2003.
Honors include the Humboldt-Prize of the Federal Republic of West Germany,
in 1979; a Doctor of Technology honoris causa from Tampere University
of Technology in Finland, in 1982; and a Senior Scientist Award from the
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, in 1985; as well as election
to Fellow of TMS (1987) and ASM (1993), and member of the National Academy
of Engineering, in 1999.
Fred retired from Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1999 and is now a 'Disatinguished Professor' Affiliate at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering, Dept of Mechnical and Aeronautical Engineering. He has developed an interest in the Physics of the Mind.
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