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This photo includes Joe Hamil…
2008
This photo includes Joe Hamilton and some of his 100 graduate students that he mentored over his 64 years on the Vanderbilt faculty. This was taken on occastion of a symposium that Ed and I helped organize to honor Joe after 50 years on the faculty. Ed was one of Joe's early grad students and fnished his PhD in 1966. I was two years behind, finishing in 1968. I always looked up to and respected Ed.
This is a photo of Ed and his…
Oak Ridge, TN, USA
This is a photo of Ed and his colleagues performing an experiment at Oak Ridge National Lab. Ed worked on and led many such experiments at UNISOR and Holifield.
We four took the lead on a 50…
2022, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
We four took the lead on a 50-year anniversary celebration of UJISOR in Oak Ridge: Lee Riedinger, Ken Carter, Gene Spejewski, and Ed. This is the last time I saw Ed. He was struggling with neuropathy in his feet but otherwise moved around well and gave a wonderful talk about some of his many contributions to UNISOR.
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In lieu of flowers

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Here  is Ed and Jo Zganjar wi…
Here is Ed and Jo Zganjar with Joe and Jannelle Hamilton. Joe was Ed's mentor in grad school and then a lifelong colleague in nuclear physics.
This is a photo of a young Ed…
1975
This is a photo of a young Ed Zganjar and a young John Wood. Ed and John were close physics colleagues for decades - a wonderful team. John spent his career at Georgia Tech .
Here is the signing of foundi…
1971, Oak Ridge National Laboratory ORIC conference room
Here is the signing of founding of UNISOR - a university consortium located at ORNL - Ed Zganjar was a key member through out its existence. I was so fortunate to be associated with Ed from 1965 on. Below is a brief, incomplete, look at some of his experimental work.
One of Ed's key contributions…
1973, UNISOR lab
One of Ed's key contributions was development of much needed experimental devices to make experiments better - indeed, possible. This is an early example - as you will see they got much ! more complicated
Our experiments lasted for da…
1974, UNISOR lab
Our experiments lasted for days around the clock - Ed hardly ever left but sometimes ....
1978, UNISOR facility
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Ed with two of his students P…
1991, Holifield Heavy Ion Research Facility HHRIF
Ed with two of his students Paresh Joshi, Dubravka Rupnik and their experiment at UNISOR
Ed checking out moving tape c…
2002, Holifield Radioactive Ion Beam Facility, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
Ed checking out moving tape collector design
Moving tape collector were a …
2004, Holifield Radioactive Ion Beam Facility, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
Moving tape collector were a continuing issue with our experiments- Ed continued to refine, innovate them
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Ed with one of his more compl…
2007, Holifield Radioactive Ion Beam Facility, Oak Ridge, TN, USA
Ed with one of his more complicated devices. LeRIBSS - Low Energy Radioactive Ion Beam Spectroscopy Station. His acronyms reflected his "Louisiana roots". With closure of HRIBF in 2012 Ed continued developing equipment for other labs including TRIUMF in Canada
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I have known and respected Ed since I joined the Department 34 years ago. My most vivid and cherished memories of Ed come from a daily lunchtime ritual shared By Ed, Arlo, Ravi and me over the last dozen years or so. We would bring our own lunches and sit together to talk about whatever was on our minds, family events, national and international politics, recent scientific developments, departmental issues, etc. Ed would tell us stories about his travels, funny anecdotes about his time working for his dad, his latest fine carpentry project, and his latest jokes. Ed and I exchanged many such jokes over the years. His favorite joke subjects included Cajuns, politics, religion, and sex. Ed was fun and enjoyed life to the fullest. I miss him.
Ed became one of my closest friends and colleagues in my 50 years in the department. We shared a mutual respect and affection for each other. Among many memorable moments are his excitement over a carpentry project, a greenhouse he built for a grandson, a nuclear physics detector, and a trip where he took several undergraduate physics students to Chicago and Fermilab. I will miss him, my sympathies with Jo, his children, and family.
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Edward Zganjar