Walker was born in Cleveland, Ohio on August 24, 1936, to Arthur and Hilda Walker. He was an only child. Arthur moved to New York at the age of five. Arthur attended Bronx High School of Science. In 1957 he completed his undergraduate studies at Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland. Here, he earned his bachelor's degree in physics. Both his master's degree and doctorate in astrophysics came from the University of Illinois, in 1958 and 1962 respectively. His dissertation for his doctorate titled, “Photo meson Production from Neutrons Bound in Helium and Deuterium,” focused on the atomic binding of protons and neutrons, as well as the radiation and force carriers involved in this process.
Career
In 1962, Walker began his scientific career in the U.S. Air Force. He held the rank of first lieutenant, and worked in the Weapons Laboratory. Walker helped to create a satellite to study Van Allen Belt Radiation. He also worked at the Space Physics Laboratory of the Aerospace Corporation, when his military stint ended in 1965. Here, Walker directed the Space Astronomy Program from 1971 to 1973. Much of his career involved using rocket technology and satellites to study the sun's atmosphere at the ultraviolet and X-ray levels. He was a professor at Stanford University from 1974 until his death in 2001. Walker started as the associate professor of Applied Physics in January 1974 and became a full professor in 1982. By 1991 he became a joint professor in applied physics and physics. Walker was a member of the Stanford's Center for Space and Astrophysics, as well as the Astronomy Program, for all his time at the school. He also chaired the Astronomy Program from 1977 to 1980. Walker mentored thirteen graduate students over his career at Stanford, and a majority of these students came from underrepresented groups in science. His first graduate student, Sally Ride, went on to become the first American woman in space. He was instrumental in building Congressional approval for the National Solar Observatory, and served on the Rogers Commission which investigated the explosion of the Challenger Space Shuttle in 1986. Throughout his academic career, Walker championed minority and underprivileged students within the university system and was a leader in the community of black physicists.
Research
Walker, alongside H.R. Rugge, completed early studies, from 1965 to 1975, to view the Sun's atmosphere with X-ray imaging. After coming to Stanford, Walker began working with Troy Barbee of the school's Material Sciences Department to observe the Sun's corona. Walker believed that Barbee's multilayered thin films would provide improved images for a X-ray telescope. In 1987, Barbee and Walker's satellites captured some of the first images of the Sun corona. Before his death, Walker was researching X-ray spectroscopy technology. He and his colleagues used this vnology to development three dimensional images of celestial objects. This new technology was the basis of the dark matter detection method advanced by Professor Blas Cabrara of Stanford's Physics Department.
Death and legacy
Walker died on April 29, 2001, at home on the Stanford campus, following a battle with cancer. In 2016, the Astronomical Society of the Pacific instituted an annual Arthur B.C. Walker II Award "established to honor an outstanding scientist whose research and educational efforts substantially contributes to astronomy and who has demonstrated a substantial commitment to mentoring students from underrepresented groups pursuing degrees in astronomy and/or been instrumental in creating or supporting innovative and successful STEM programs designed to support underrepresented students or their teachers"; included is a scholarship to a student of the recipient's choice.