Fert, Albert

Fert, Albert, << fehr, al behr >> (1938-…), a French physicist, won a share of the 2007 Nobel Prize in physics for discovering a phenomenon called giant magnetoresistance (GMR). Computer hard drives can use GMR to read data stored on a magnetic disk, converting it into an electrical signal. The discovery of GMR enabled the development of the small, high-capacity hard drives found in many digital music players and laptop computers. Fert shared the prize with the German physicist Peter A. Grünberg, who discovered GMR independently.

Most materials resist the flow of electric current through them, an effect called electrical resistance. Scientists have long known that the electrical resistance of a magnetic material, such as iron, changes slightly when a magnetic field is applied to the material. A magnetic field is the influence that a magnetic object creates in the region around it. The effect that the field has on resistance, called magnetoresistance, is typically small.

In the 1980’s, Fert and Grünberg found that devices made of thin, alternating layers of magnetic and nonmagnetic metal showed much greater magnetoresistance under certain conditions. This phenomenon became known as “giant” magnetoresistance or GMR. In the 1990’s, GMR proved useful in the design of readout heads that retrieve data stored on hard disks. Such disks store data as small magnetized areas on their surfaces. When a GMR readout head passes over the disk, the magnetic fields from the different areas on the disk change the head’s resistance between low and high, varying the flow of electric current through the head to produce an electrical signal. GMR heads are much more sensitive than traditional readout heads, enabling engineers to design tiny hard disks that hold more data by storing it as smaller magnetized areas.

Fert was born on March 7, 1938, in Carcassonne, France. He earned a Ph.D. degree in physics in 1970 from the Paris-Sud 11 University in Orsay, France. Fert then taught and conducted research there, becoming a professor of physics in 1976.