The History of Science Paw-thorship

Gabrielle Birchak/ October 17, 2025/ Archive, Modern History

Publish or Purrish: The Cat Who Co-Authored Physics

Imag­ine open­ing one of the world’s most respect­ed physics jour­nals and find­ing a co-author whose cre­den­tials include excel­lent purring tech­nique, rig­or­ous sun­beam selec­tion, and a demon­strat­ed tal­ent for bat­ting pen caps off a desk. In Novem­ber 1975, read­ers of Phys­i­cal Review Let­ters did exact­ly that. They met F.D.C. Willard, also known as Chester, a Siamese cat cred­it­ed as co-author of a tech­ni­cal paper on the mag­net­ic behav­ior of sol­id helium‑3. The paper appeared under two names: J. H. Hetherington…and F. D. C. Willard.

How did a house cat arrive in the byline of a peer-reviewed physics paper? The answer begins with a clas­sic writ­ing hic­cup. Physi­cist Jack Het­her­ing­ton had draft­ed his results using “we” through­out. In the 1970s, sin­gle-authored sub­mis­sions to Phys­i­cal Review Let­ters were expect­ed to use the sin­gu­lar voice, and edi­tors were known to push back. Rather than retype the entire man­u­script on a type­writer, painful, slow, and error-prone, Het­her­ing­ton invent­ed a sec­ond author. He looked across the room, saw Chester, and gave him a suit­ably sci­en­tif­ic alias: F.D.C. Willard. The ini­tials stood for “Felis Domes­ti­cus Chester,” and “Willard” was the name of Chester’s father, which made the feline’s byline feel plau­si­bly for­mal. The jour­nal accept­ed the paper. No one was the wis­er at first.

https://www.sintony.it/news/2024–05-12/il-gatto-che-ha-scritto-due-articoli-scientifici-la-folle-storia-di-f-d-c-willard

So what was this famous cat paper actu­al­ly about? The title is mouth-stretch­ing: “Two‑, Three‑, and Four-Atom Exchange Effects in bcc³He.” In plain lan­guage, the study mod­eled how the nuclei in sol­id helium‑3 behave when the atoms exchange places in coor­di­nat­ed quan­tum moves. Those exchanges affect mag­net­ic order at very low tem­per­a­tures, which are mere frac­tions of a degree above absolute zero.

Mag­net­ic order mat­ters because it tells physi­cists how the tiny mag­net­ic “com­pass­es” inside atoms, caused by their nuclei or their elec­trons, line up with each oth­er. At ordi­nary tem­per­a­tures, these com­pass­es wob­ble around chaot­i­cal­ly because of heat, and any over­all mag­net­ic pat­tern gets washed out. But when you cool a mate­r­i­al down close to absolute zero, the ther­mal noise drops away. The way those com­pass­es then set­tle, whether they all point the same way (fer­ro­mag­net­ism), alter­nate in a checker­board fash­ion (anti­fer­ro­mag­net­ism), or arrange in more exot­ic pat­terns, reveals deep infor­ma­tion about the forces between atoms.

For helium‑3, which is already unusu­al because its nuclei are quan­tum objects with spin, dis­cov­er­ing a par­tic­u­lar mag­net­ic order is like shin­ing a flash­light into the hid­den rules of quan­tum mat­ter. It helps sci­en­tists test the­o­ries of how par­ti­cles inter­act, and those lessons rip­ple out­ward into broad­er areas of physics, like under­stand­ing super­con­duc­tiv­i­ty, quan­tum phase tran­si­tions, and even the behav­ior of mat­ter in neu­tron stars.

Using a mean-field mod­el, the “authors” repro­duced mea­sure­ments at high­er tem­per­a­tures and pre­dict­ed anti­fer­ro­mag­net­ic phas­es at low­er tem­per­a­tures, offer­ing a coher­ent pic­ture of how nuclear spins would orga­nize in the crys­tal. For low-tem­per­a­ture physi­cists, these were seri­ous results in a chal­leng­ing sys­tem; the math­e­mat­ics was care­ful, and the pre­dic­tions mapped nice­ly to exper­i­ments. The fact that one author napped through most of the cal­cu­la­tions did not change the physics.

The secret even­tu­al­ly slipped out because Het­her­ing­ton leaned into the joke with the same gus­to as a cat chas­ing the red dot. After pub­li­ca­tion, he signed a hand­ful of reprint copies and pressed Chester’s paw, inked like a tiny stamp, next to the cat’s print­ed name. As those keep­sakes cir­cu­lat­ed, col­leagues began ask­ing to meet the mys­te­ri­ous Pro­fes­sor Willard at con­fer­ences and by phone. One sto­ry recounts a vis­i­tor ring­ing Hetherington’s office; when told Jack was out, they asked to speak to Willard instead. Laugh­ter fol­lowed, and the truth padded into daylight.

Acad­e­mia most­ly took the rev­e­la­tion in stride. At Michi­gan State Uni­ver­si­ty, the physics chair, Tru­man O. Woodruff, even wrote a play­ful let­ter ask­ing whether Dr. Willard might con­sid­er a “Vis­it­ing Dis­tin­guished Pro­fes­sor” role. It was the 1970s; a bit of whim­sy coex­ist­ing with hard sci­ence felt almost restora­tive. The only peo­ple report­ed­ly less amused were jour­nal edi­tors, who do have to enforce author­ship stan­dards for a living.

Chester’s alter ego did not stop there. In 1980, a sec­ond arti­cle appeared under a sin­gle author, F.D.C. Willard, this time in La Recherche, a French pop­u­lar sci­ence mag­a­zine. The piece sum­ma­rized sol­id helium‑3 as a “nuclear anti­fer­ro­mag­net,” a tidy syn­the­sis for a broad­er read­er­ship. The back­sto­ry, as retold by sev­er­al accounts, is that the human researchers could not agree on a ver­sion every­one liked, so they cred­it­ed the world’s best-pub­lished cat instead. Whether or not that detail has been embell­ished over the years, the paper exists; and on paper, at least, Chester became the only cat to serve as sole author of a physics article.

Fast for­ward to mod­ern times, and the Amer­i­can Phys­i­cal Soci­ety has been in on the fun. On April Fools’ Day, the Soci­ety announced that cat-authored papers, includ­ing Het­her­ing­ton and Willard’s, would be open access “effec­tive imme­di­ate­ly.” It was a wink to a leg­endary anec­dote and a reminder that even in pre­ci­sion-mind­ed com­mu­ni­ties, humor has its place. Sci­en­tists are peo­ple, too, and occa­sion­al­ly, their cats are co-authors.[1]

Now, if you are won­der­ing whether this was a one-off, the answer is “sort of.” Pets and oth­er non-human ani­mals have appeared as cred­it­ed authors more than once, some­times as satire, some­times as com­men­tary on the odd­i­ties of sci­en­tif­ic cred­it. The Willard episode is the most charm­ing, because it start­ed as a prac­ti­cal fix for a pro­noun prob­lem and end­ed as a beloved bit of physics folk­lore. But it is not alone.

Before we tour the wider menagerie, it is worth paus­ing on the author­ship ques­tion. Who deserves to be an author on a schol­ar­ly paper? Most mod­ern jour­nal poli­cies say that authors must make sub­stan­tial con­tri­bu­tions to the con­cep­tion or design, analy­sis or inter­pre­ta­tion of data, draft­ing or crit­i­cal revi­sion, approve the final ver­sion, and accept account­abil­i­ty for all aspects of the work. By those cri­te­ria, cats, dogs, and ham­sters fail on at least the approval and account­abil­i­ty require­ments, even if their com­pan­ion­ship inspires ideas. That is one rea­son some of the exam­ples you are about to hear pro­voked edi­to­ri­als, sanc­tions, or pol­i­cy changes. The line between a wink­ing in-joke and a breach of ethics depends on con­text, con­sent, and com­mu­ni­ty stan­dards that have tight­ened over time.

So as we con­clude I’m going to leave three flash cards in the form of a Q&A

Flash Card Num­ber 1: Who was Gal­adriel Mirkwood?

Answer: The co-author on the paper“In a ful­ly H‑2 incom­pat­i­ble chimera, T cells of donor ori­gin can respond to minor his­to­com­pat­i­bil­i­ty anti­gens in asso­ci­a­tion with either donor or host H‑2 type,” which was in the Jour­nal of Exper­i­men­tal Med­i­cine in 1978. This paper describes how donor T‑cells behave when trans­plant­ed into a host with a com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent genet­ic back­ground. This co-author along with the pri­ma­ry author Immu­nol­o­gist Pol­ly Matzinger showed that the donor cells could still rec­og­nize cer­tain “minor” genet­ic dif­fer­ences and mount immune respons­es, which deep­ened under­stand­ing of trans­plant rejec­tion. Gal­adriel Mirk­wood was an Afghan hound.

Pol­ly Matzinger and Gal­adriel Mirk­wood — By User:Polly matzinger — Own work, Pub­lic Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=107592409

Flash Card Num­ber 2: Who was Kanzi Wam­ba, Pan­ban­isha Wam­ba, and Nyota Wamba?

Answer: The co-authors on the 2007 paper “Wel­fare of Apes in Cap­tive Envi­ron­ments: Com­ments on, and by, a Spe­cif­ic Group of Apes” explored how bono­bos expe­ri­enced life in research set­tings, includ­ing their abil­i­ty to com­mu­ni­cate through sym­bol boards. Kanzi, Pan­ban­isha, and Nyota were bonobo apes. By cred­it­ing Kanzi, Pan­ban­isha, and Nyota as co-authors, the pri­ma­ry researcher, Sue Sav­age-Rum­baugh, empha­sized that the apes’ own voic­es and pref­er­ences were part of eval­u­at­ing their welfare.

Sue Sav­age-Rum­baugh (L), Kanzi ®, and his sis­ter Pan­bin­isha © work­ing at the portable “key­board”.  By William H. Calvin, PhD — Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=49108228

Flash Card Num­ber 3: Who was H.A.M.S. ter Tisha

Answer: The co-author on the paper “Detec­tion of Earth rota­tion with a dia­mag­net­i­cal­ly lev­i­tat­ing gyro­scope.”  This paper, writ­ten along­side Nobel win­ning Physi­cist A.K. Geim, showed that pow­er­ful mag­nets can make a tiny gyro­scope float, cre­at­ing an Earth-based “zero-grav­i­ty” envi­ron­ment. Their lev­i­tat­ing gyro­scope was sen­si­tive enough to detect Earth’s rota­tion, demon­strat­ing a play­ful but gen­uine advance in pre­ci­sion mea­sure­ment. The co-author?  Well you prob­a­bly guessed it right. The co-author was a hamster.

The Willard tale endures because it blends three things sci­en­tists love: clever solu­tions, rig­or­ous work, and a sense of play. Hetherington’s results were seri­ous physics, pub­lished in a top-tier jour­nal and cit­ed by peers. He mis-stepped only in pro­noun choice, and in an era before effort­less dig­i­tal edits, he fixed it with a cre­ative flour­ish. The com­mu­ni­ty embraced the joke because it did not dimin­ish the sci­ence. It actu­al­ly human­ized it, or per­haps, feline-ized it.

There is also a broad­er cul­tur­al truth here. Sci­en­tif­ic author­ship isn’t just about who con­tributed; it’s about fit­ting into con­ven­tions that can decide whether your work ever sees day­light. In a “pub­lish or per­ish” sys­tem, where careers rise or fall on cita­tions and jour­nal place­ments, a sin­gle, bril­liant voice often gets silenced unless it bends to the rules. That is why Jack Het­her­ing­ton reached for a co-author, and why oth­ers, in dif­fer­ent ways, have played with author­ship. These maneu­vers weren’t just jokes; they were acts of neces­si­ty inside a pub­lish­ing tra­di­tion that can be cen­turies old. Hon­est­ly, I think we need new con­ven­tions that include co-authors that ref­er­ence our cats, dogs, snakes, ger­bils, par­rots, fer­rets, and any oth­er help that our sci­en­tists rely on to keep them cen­tered and focused. Just my two cents, brought to you by Willard the Wiz­ard and Pene­lope the Pen Thief. I think you know who they are.


[1] Het­her­ing­ton, J. H., and F. D. C. Willard. 1975. “Two‑, Three‑, and Four-Atom Exchange Effects in Bcc He 3.” Phys­i­cal Review Let­ters 35 (21): 1442–44. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.35.1442.

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