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         Physics History:     more books (100)
  1. Resources for the history of physics: Guide to books and audio-visual materials: Guide to original works of historical importance and their translations into other languages
  2. Quantum Physics in America: The Years Through 1935 (The History of Modern Physics 1800-1950 Vol 10) by Katherine Russell Sopka, 1988-07
  3. ON THE HISTORY OF PHYSICS AT MICHIGAN.
  4. History of Physics - 4 Vols. by G.R. Chhatwal, 1995
  5. Radar in World War II (The History of Modern Physics 1800-1950, Two volumes:Sect. A-C, and Sect. D-E w/ Appendices)
  6. A Selection of Manuscript Collections at American Repositories. National Catalog of Sources for History of Physics, Report No. 1 by Joan Nelson Warnow, 1969
  7. A history of experimental physics by Carl Trueblood Chase, 1932
  8. History of Original Ideas and Basic Discoveries in Particle Physics (NATO Science Series: B:)
  9. The Life and Times of Modern Physics: History of Physics II (Readings from Physics Today, No 5)
  10. Are all particles real? [An article from: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics] by S. Goldstein, J. Taylor, et all 2005-03-01
  11. The History of Early Nuclear Physics, (1896-1931 Vity and Its Radiations) by Milorad Mladjenovic, 1992-10
  12. Elementary Particles: A Short History of Some Discoveries in Atomic Physics
  13. CATALOGUE OF WORKS ON NATURAL HISTORY, PHYSICS, MATHEMATICS, AND OTHER SCIENCES, OFFERED FOR SALE AT THE CASH PRICES AFFIXED BY BERNARD QUARITCH. by No author., 1881
  14. The History of Physics by Isaac Asimov, 1985

81. Science Central : Science - Physics - History - People
Category Listing Science physics - history - People.
http://www.sciencecentral.com/category/568892
Sunday, 25 September, 2005 Home Submit Science Site Set as Homepage Add to Favorite ... Contact search for Directories Agriculture Anomalies and Alternative Science Astronomy Biology ... Technology Category: Science Physics History People SUBMIT A SITE
People Order by Popularity Alphabet Sites Records 1-10 of 106 Go to page Lectures on Aristotle, Galileo, Newton, and Einstein (Popularity:
Full lecture notes from an introductory course taught at U ...
Albert Einstein and the Atomic Bomb
(Popularity:
Albert Einstein's role in the creation of the atomic bomb ...
Pictures of Physicists
(Popularity:
Pictures and drawings of famous physicists, a comprehensive collection.
Albert Einstein Biography
(Popularity:
Student written biographical essay. Includes bibliography.
Physicists on Stamps
(Popularity:
Scanned images of stamps from around the world. Donated scans ... Hoff Lu, Father of Nuclear Energy in China (Popularity: Book and documentary on the life story of a native ... Albert Einstien (Popularity: Biography includes details about his family, childhood, and his role ... Lawrence and His Laboratory (Popularity: Scientific history of the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's ...

82. History Of Particle Physics
We invite you to explore this history of particle physics with a focus on the scientists and thinkers who helped shape the field of particle physics.
http://particleadventure.org/particleadventure/other/history/
back to history page
Particle Physics Timeline
For over two thousand years people have thought about the fundamental particles from which all matter is made, starting with the gradual development of atomic theory, followed by a deeper understanding of the quantized atom, leading to the recent theory of the Standard Model. We invite you to explore this history of particle physics with a focus on the scientists and thinkers who helped shape the field of particle physics. The four sections are arranged chronologically. You can use the index to find more information about a specific person or event. Earliest times - 1550 AD: The Ancients
1550 - 1900 AD: The Scientific Revolution and Classical Mechanics

1900 - 1964 AD: Quantum Theory

1964 - Present: The Modern View (the Standard Model)
...

back to history page
Sections of the History of Particle Physics were written by the physics class of 1996 of the Mountain Empire High School, Pine Valley, California, under the guidance of Susan Lafo, as indicated.

83. Particle Physics Education Sites
4000 Years of Women in Science history and biographies of prominent female Contributions of 20th Century Women to physics - cites their work and
http://particleadventure.org/particleadventure/other/othersites.html
back to home page Education and
Information
National ...
Laboratories
Particle Physics Education and Information sites:
top
Introduction:

84. A World Of Particles.The Discovery Of The Model. Atoms.
A key stage 4 resource for physics GCSE Atoms The story of particle physics goes back 2000 years to the Greeks. Atoms, history 1
http://www.schoolscience.co.uk/content/4/physics/particles/particlesdiscover1.ht
document.write(''); CSAct[/*CMP*/ 'B3CE3D2A4'] = new Array(CSShowHide,/*CMP*/ 'orangemap',1); Atoms history 1 The story of particle physics goes back 2000 years to the Greeks; and Isaac Newton thought that matter was made up of particles in the 17th century. However, it was John Dalton who formally stated in 1802 that everything is made from tiny atoms. accelerator tunnels that are the size of a small town. The photo shows an aerial view of the path of the accelerator tunnel at CERN which crosses the French/Swiss border. The tunnel is 27 km long. As well as discovering new particles, the scientists at CERN developed the technology that has now become the Internet. The first particle model The pattern period In 1869 Dmitri Mendeleev, a Russian chemist, grouped the elements into periods according to their chemical properties. However, his periodic table had gaps in it. Mendeleev was not put off; instead he used his periodic patterns to predict the existence and properties of the missing elements. Within a few years, germanium and gallium, for example, were discovered with the predicted properties. Similarly, a hundred years on, physicists were predicting the existence and properties of new fundamental particles , which were later discovered.

85. A Walk Through Time
An illustrated history of timekeeping from ancient times to the present. A NIST physics Laboratory Presentation. The Evolution of Time Measurement
http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Time/time.html
A NIST Physics Laboratory Presentation The Evolution of Time Measurement through the Ages
Ancient Calendars
Early Clocks
A Revolution in Timekeeping
The "Atomic" Age
World Time Scales and Time Zones
NIST Time Services
Bibliography
Version History National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
Physics Laboratory

Time and Frequency Division
(for additional information on time services and standards) Note: This page can be accessed using http://physics.nist.gov/time Online: May 1995 - Last update: April 30, 2002 - cns

86. Mathematical Physics Index
history Topics Mathematical physics Index history Topics Index Alphabetical history Topics Index Main index Biographies index
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Indexes/Math_Physics.html
History Topics: Mathematical Physics Index
  • General relativity
  • History of Quantum mechanics
  • Orbits and gravitation
  • Special relativity ... Search Form JOC/EFR November 2004 The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Indexes/Math_Physics.html
  • 87. Quantum Mechanics History
    Mathematical physics index history Topics Index Planck won the 1918 Nobel Prize for physics for this work. In 1901 Ricci and LeviCivita published
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/The_Quantum_age_begins.ht
    A history of Quantum Mechanics
    Mathematical Physics index History Topics Index
    Version for printing
    It is hard to realise that the electron was only discovered a little over 100 years ago in 1897. That it was not expected is illustrated by a remark made by J J Thomson, the discoverer of the electron. He said I was told long afterwards by a distinguished physicist who had been present at my lecture that he thought I had been pulling their leg. The neutron was not discovered until 1932 so it is against this background that we trace the beginnings of quantum theory back to 1859. In 1859 Gustav Kirchhoff proved a theorem about blackbody radiation. A blackbody is an object that absorbs all the energy that falls upon it and, because it reflects no light, it would appear black to an observer. A blackbody is also a perfect emitter and Kirchhoff proved that the energy emitted E depends only on the temperature T and the frequency v of the emitted energy, i.e. E J T v He challenged physicists to find the function J In 1879 Josef Stefan proposed, on experimental grounds, that the total energy emitted by a hot body was proportional to the fourth power of the temperature. In the generality stated by

    88. Copenhagen | PBS
    Stephen Rea as Niels Bohr, Daniel Craig as Werner Heisenberg, and Francesca Annis as. physics, history and Copenhagen
    http://www.pbs.org/hollywoodpresents/copenhagen/

    Home
    Interviews Key Scene Backstory ... Site Map The Copenhagen website was made possible in part by The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Community Television of Southern California (KCET)

    89. Sources For History Of Quantum Physics

    http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/guides/ahqp/

    90. Untitled Document
    You are in history of physics/history of Quantum physics to the debate about the relationship of theoretical physics (=TP) with classical mathematics
    http://www.historyofscience.it/StoriadellaFisicaQuantistica.htm
    You are in > History of Physics/History of Quantum Physics History of Quantum Physics Which kind of mathematics for Quantum Mechanics? A survey and a program of research
    In previous papers I reviewed past contributions untill to 1970 to the debate about the relationship of theoretical physics (=TP) with classical mathematics (=CM) which notoriously includes actual infinity (e.g. Zermelo's axiom). In this communication I will
    Which kind of mathematics for Quantum Mechanics? The relevance of H. Weyl's a program of research

    In 1918 Weyl's book Das Kontinuum planned to found anew mathematics upon more conservative bases than both rigorous mathematics and set theory. It gave birth to so-called Weyl's elementary mathematics, i.e. an intermediate mathematics between the
    I diversi approcci alla logica quantistica.
    From the first proposal of a non classical logic for Quantum Mechanics (QM) by Birkhoff and von Neumann in 1936, many efforts followed in order to clarify in which sense Quantum Logic (QL) is different from classical logic. Birkhoff and von Neumann's distinction between

    91. EJ Miner Results
    Browse Titles Browse Subjects Colorado EJ s. Titles with the Subject Heading physics history . 1 EJournals. history of physics Newsletter
    http://ejournal.coalliance.org/SubjTitles.cfm?subj=Physics -- History&lf=No&lr=N

    92. EJ Miner Results
    Titles with the Subject Heading physics history Bibliography . 1 EJournals. history of physics Newsletter. © Copyright 1998 - 2000 The Alliance
    http://ejournal.coalliance.org/SubjTitles.cfm?subj=Physics -- History -- Bibliog

    93. :: Paths Of Physics ::.
    Research activities, essays, databases, books, meetings in history and Philosophy of physics. A section is dedicated to the development of physics in Italy.
    http://fisicavolta.unipv.it/percorsi/
    home history philosophy foundations ... news last page update: 3/14/04 7:36:44 PM [best view 1024x768] site designed by lucatru

    94. :: History Of Physics Archives ::.
    Databases and digital archives for the history of physics in Italy after the second world war.
    http://fisicavolta.unipv.it/asf/
    Sunday, 25/9/2005 :: homepage ::.
    foreword
    register archives links ... home last page update: 7/24/03 2:45:47 PM

    95. Department Of Physics - University Of Michigan
    University of Michigan Department of physics history Gallery at Michigan in 1902, and chaired the physics Department until his retirement in 1941.
    http://www.physics.lsa.umich.edu/about/history/gallery.asp
    History
  • Gallery
  • Bentley Historical Library Awards ... Internal
    University of Michigan Department of Physics - History Gallery
    Harrison M. Randall at his Infrared Spectrograph around 1914. Randall was born in Michigan in 1870, earned his Ph.D.
    at Michigan in 1902, and chaired the Physics Department until his retirement in 1941.
    The Department's main building bears
    his name. Ernest Barker amazes the public with a demonstration of infrared spectroscopy in or around 1938. He chaired the department from 1941-1955. H. R. Crane tends to his 1,000,000 electron volt linear accelerator in 1938. The particle beam ran down the tube at left to a detector room below. Five 200,000 volt units at the right provided the accelerating voltage. Those retro-looking rings were to suppress unwanted discharges. Randall Lab is unique in that it has three basement levels. This photo was taken from the sub-basement level, and a basement-level door is visible in the background. The detector room was in the sub-sub basement. Paul Weyrich at his ruling engine around 1940.
  • 96. MASC25
    There is 1 result matching the heading physics history. history of Science Sources, UCL (University College London) Expand
    http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ls/masc25/browse.php?term=Physics - History

    97. Scout Report Archives
    AIP Center for history of physics Niels Bohr Libra The Bohr Library site features an online catalog, archival finding aids, oral history interview
    http://scout.wisc.edu/Archives/SPT--AdvancedSearch.php?FieldName=Classification&

    98. ScienceDirect - Studies In History And Philosophy Of Science Part B: Studies In
    . DIR Parent Directory DIR Timeline/ 17-Sep-2003 1051 - DIR People/...... Index of /balazs/physics/historyIndex of /balazs/physics/history. Icon Name Last modified Size
    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/13552198
    Register or Login: Password: Athens/Institution Login Quick Search: within This Journal All Journals All Full-text Sources
    Studies In History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies In History and Philosophy of Modern Physics Bookmark this page as: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/13552198
    Articles in Press
    Volume 36 Volume 36, Issue 3 , Pages 415-590 (September 2005) Volume 36, Issue 2 , Pages 219-413 (June 2005) Volume 36, Issue 1 , Pages 1-218 (March 2005) Volume 35 Volume 34 Volume 33 Volume 32 ... Volume 26 Alert me when new Journal Issues are available Add this journal to My Favorite Journals Sample Issue Online More Publication Info Information for Authors
    Contact Us
    ... Elsevier B.V.

    99. Usenet Physics FAQ
    sci.physics frequently asked questions with answers.
    http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/
    Version Date: August 2005
    Usenet Physics FAQ
    This is the web version of the Usenet Physics FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions). Its purpose is to provide good answers to questions that have been discussed often in sci.physics and related usenet newsgroups. The articles in this FAQ are based on those discussions and on information from good reference sources. That does not mean that they are always perfect and complete. If you have corrections, updates or additional points to make please send an email to the editor, Don Koks (his cv is here ). If you want to write up an article following a news group discussion about a subject not yet covered here then feel free to send it to the editor, but please do not use this address to ask new questions. Ask them in the appropriate newsgroup instead. If you are new to the Physics newsgroups, welcome! Please read the article An Introduction to the Physics Newsgroups . It will help you find the right newsgroup for your questions and will give you other crucial advice about appropriate netiquette for these groups. Above all you should check carefully to see if your questions are answered in this FAQ before posting. This FAQ was created by Scott Chase in 1992. The web version was created, maintained and enlarged by Michael Weiss and Philip Gibbs. Others who have written for the FAQ are credited at the top of the items they submitted while many more who have made smaller contributions have been thanked privately.

    100. Walter Russell 'Physics' Homepage
    Alternative physics Concepts Images and Links of Walter Russell
    http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/8989/
    The Physics/Cosmogeny of
    Walter Russell and Lao Russell
    University of Science and Philosophy
    1-800-882-LOVE (call for info)
    Please email me if you have any interesting or related SCIENCE links!
    Wait for the animated gif to load! (It's worth the wait)
    ALL IMAGES ARE THE ORIGINAL PROPERTY OF WALTER RUSSELL!
    Interesting Images and IDEAS!
  • The Russell Periodic Table (c.1926)!
  • The basis for structure of Atomic, Solar, and Stellar systems
  • The cube - the wave formula for octaves of matter and light is 9
  • Complete octave of carbon rings, as manifested in the wave ...
    View OLD guestbook
  • Other Russell-related links
    Email me if any links are broken...
    University of Science and Philosophy
    The Twilight Club

    Free Energy, Theory, Devices and Progess ...
    E-mail bentech@geocities.com
    Ben Groseclose (bentech@geocities.com)

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