David Elmer Alburger, ^

David Elmer Alburger, ^

Male 1920 - 2012  (91 years)


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  • Name David Elmer Alburger  [1, 2
    Suffix
    Birth 6 Oct 1920  PA Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 3, 4, 5
    Gender Male 
    Death 13 Jun 2012  [1, 2, 5, 6
    Cause: CAUS: complications arising from stomach cancer 
    Burial 16 Sep 2012  Brookhaven (Oaklawn Cemetery), Brookhaven, Suffolk, NY Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Person ID I15154  My Genealogy
    Last Modified 17 Sep 2023 

    Father Elmer Russell Alburger,   b. 20 Oct 1884, Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 11 Apr 1975 (Age 90 years) 
    Mother Josephine Hare Reid,   b. 17 Oct 1889, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Yes, date unknown 
    Marriage 1910  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F6756  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Mary Mickle, ^,   b. 29 Jun 1917   d. 28 Jun 2008, Brookhaven, Brookhaven, Suffolk, NY Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 90 years) 
    Children 
     1. David Reid Alburger, ^
     2. Andrew Alburger, ^
     3. Eve Alburger, ^
     4. Mary Jo Alburger, ^
    Family ID F6524  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 27 May 2025 

  • Sources 
    1. [S49] Long Island Advance (Long Island Advance, 20 Medford Ave, Patchogue, NY), 21 June 2012, p. 19.
      David E. Alburger, 91, a longtime Brookhaven hamlet resident, passed away June 13, from complications arising from stomach cancer. Mr. Alburger graduated from Swarthmore College in 1942 and received a Ph. D. in physics from Yale. He worked for Naval Research during WWII before finishing his graduate work and joining Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1948. He published over 200 research papers over the course of his career.

      Mr. Alburger served as president of the South Country Central School Board, played viola ith the Bay Area Symphony for over 40 years and was an avid runner, going years without missing a day. Every year on his birthday, he would run his age in miles, finally stopping at 8.8 miles on his 88th birthday.

      He is survived by his two sons, David Reid and Andrew; and by his daughters, Mary Jo and Eve. A memorial service is planned for early fall.

    2. [S10] Oaklawn Cemetery, Hamlet of Brookhaven, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, NY (includes gravestones and cemetery association records), Lot 167C.

    3. [S1144] Ancestry.com. New York Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.
      They arrived on the S.S. Pan America from Montevideo, Uruguay on 7 November 1924.

    4. [S785] Ancestry.com. U.S. Public Records Index [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007. Original data: Compiled from various U.S. public records.
      Indicated 6 October 1920.

    5. [S112] Social Security Death Index (U.S. Social Security Administration).

    6. [S1226] article, Brookhaven Bulletin, weekly newpaper for Laboratory employees, Upton (Brookhaven National Laboratory), Brookhaven, Suffolk, NY,,, 31 August 2012.

      By John Millener, Physics Department, with contributions from BNLers Peter Bond, Chellis
      Chasman, and Keith Jones

      David Alburger, a retired senior physicist who held a guest appointment in the Physics Department, died on June 13, 2012. He was 91. Alburger, who graduated from Swarthmore College in 1942 and worked for Naval Research during the Second World War, received his Ph.D. in physics from Yale University and joined Brookhaven as an associate scientist on July 1, 1948. In November 1948 he was named an associate physicist, in 1954, physicist, and in 1961, senior physicist. He was granted tenure in 1957.

      Alburger’s research activities at BNL spanned more than six decades, resulting in well over 200 publications, mostly in Physical Review. Thomas Ludlam, Physics Department Chair, said, “Dave was a consummate scientist, and one of the longest-serving members of the Physics Department. His hands-on, can-do approach to experimental physics was universally admired.”
      The central theme of Alburger’s work involved studies of nuclear beta decay, the process by which a neutron in an unstable nucleus turns into proton (or vice versa) with the emission of an electron and an antineutrino (or positron and neutrino). These studies often required the detection of electrons — for which he built a number of spectrometers — and the gamma rays from the decays of excited levels in the final nucleus. In this way, many properties of the decaying nucleus (mass, half life, spin, parity) and final nucleus could be determined. Over the years, as accelerators and detectors improved, there were many firsts, meaning the studies of new isotopes, along with a steady accumulation of data on nuclear structure that theorists could attempt to explain.

      Alburger’s experimental prowess attracted strong long-term collaborators with complementary skills, notably Denys Wilkinson, Oxford University and later University of Sussex, England, and Ernie Warburton of BNL, who both also excelled in theory. Wilkinson (already a Fellow of the Royal Society) came to BNL for the summer in 1958 (and in summer for the next 20 years). This resulted in an important paper on the beta decay of Berillium-11. All three were authors on four papers, out of at least 11 that bore Alburger’s name, published in 1963 (1971 and 1972 would be similarly productive years). Also involved in a number of the 1963 papers was Andre
      Gallmann from Strasbourg, another long-term collaborator, as the experimenters used small Van de Graaff accelerators at both BNL and Strasbourg.

      Alburger was Group Leader for work on the 3.5 MeV Van de Graaff for 25 years from 1953. He was the primary author of a two-page proposal for a new Tandem Van de Graaff facility consisting of two MP tandems, approved in 1962 and completed in 1970. As far as beta-decay studies were concerned, the extra energy and availability of heavy-ion beams from this facility meant that a much wider range of isotopes could be produced and studied. In fact, more experiments were often needed to track down the origin of the wide range of activities produced by heavy-ion beams. Productivity soared.

      Alburger later made useful contributions to the new heavy-ion program at the Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) (injected by the tandems), produced several compilations for nuclear data sheets at the National Nuclear Data Center at BNL, and worked in the medium-energy group’s hypernuclear program at the AGS. He also continued to work with BNL nuclear chemists, as he had periodically throughout his career, on the measurements of long half lives.
      At the time of his death, Alburger was deeply involved in a benchtop experiment to detect the rare process in which a nuclear level decays by the emission of two gamma rays that sum to the transition energy rather than by a single gamma ray. Thousands of examples of this rare decay, which occurs about three times per million decays, have been seen since data-taking started in November 2010.

      Alburger’s scientific legacy is a large body of precise experimetal measurements, many of which continue to be important, often for reasons not thought of at the time that the measurements were made.

      A longtime resident of Brookhaven Hamlet, Alburger was active in local activities and affairs. He was an avid runner — at 82, he joined the 278 runners in the 2003 Earth Day 4-mile run at Brookhaven, clocking in at 51:38. Mary Mickle Alburger, Alburger’s wife of over 60 years, died in 2008. He is survived by two sons, David Reid and Andrew, and two daughters, Mary Jo and Eve. A memorial service will be held September 16 at 3 p.m. in St. James Parish Hall, Beaver Dam Road, Brookhaven Hamlet.

      A more detailed article will appear on the BNL online Obituary Page: http://1.usa.gov/Nvjutu.