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         Physics History:     more books (100)
  1. The First War of Physics: The Secret History of the Atomic Bomb, 1939-1949 by Jim Baggott, 2010-04-13
  2. The History of Physics by Isaac Asimov, 1984-05
  3. Atomic: The First War of Physics and the Secret History of the Atom Bomb 1939 -1949 by Jim Baggott, 2009-11-05
  4. The New Physics: For the Twenty-First Century by Gordon Fraser, 2009-09-14
  5. The Oxford Guide to the History of Physics and Astronomy
  6. Great Experiments in Physics: Firsthand Accounts from Galileo to Einstein
  7. Physics in the Nineteenth Century by Robert D. Purrington, 1997-08-01
  8. Evolution of Physics by Albert Einstein, Leopold Infeld, 1967-10-30
  9. Thirty Years that Shook Physics: The Story of Quantum Theory by George Gamow, 1985-07-01
  10. A History of Natural Philosophy: From the Ancient World to the Nineteenth Century by Edward Grant, 2007-01-22
  11. A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking, 1998-09-01
  12. From Clockwork to Crapshoot: A History of Physics by Roger G. Newton, 2010-03-30
  13. Physics, the Human Adventure: From Copernicus to Einstein and Beyond by Gerald Holton, 2001-03-01
  14. Quantum Mechanics at the Crossroads: New Perspectives from History, Philosophy and Physics (The Frontiers Collection)

1. History Of Physics Exhibits And Source Materials
This Month in physics history from the American Physical Society; Physics SuccessStories from AIP how taxpayers supported advances in energy and the
http://www.aip.org/history/exhibit.htm
AIP HOME PAGE Online Journal Publishing Service AIP Journals Publishing Services Science Policy History Center Working at AIP Site Index Exhibits and Online Source Materials
for History of Physics and Allied Fields

Marie Curie and the Discovery of Radioactivity
Transistorized! - History of the Transistor Albert Einstein:
Image and Impact
... Lawrence and the Cyclotron More Resources QUALITY: The above exhibits, created by the Center for History of Physics of the American Institute of Physics, have been checked by leading experts and are kept up-to-date with new historical findings. The exhibits listed below also seem good to us but we do not stand behind their accuracy. History of Physics People History of Astronomy/Space Science/Geophysics
History of Institutions
... General History - General Physics (updated Jan 16, 2003)

2. Dynamic Directory - Science - Physics - History
The Net Advance of physics history Review Articles and Tutorials in an Encyclopaedic Format at The Net Advance of
http://www.maximumedge.com/cgi/dir/index.cgi/Science/Physics/History

3. APS News Online - This Month In Physics History
1854. Today, that first telegraph is housed in the Smithsonian Institute'sNational Museum of American History in Washington, DC.
http://www.aps.org/apsnews/0502/050211.html
MAY 2002 ISSUE
comments or questions? email
apsnews
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webmaster
May 24, 1844: Morse and the Telegraph
Sometimes technological innovation can come from the most unlikely sources. Samuel Finley Breese Morse was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts in 1791, the son of a local pastor. He was not trained as a scientist, but rather was a professional artist. Although largely an indifferent student, his interest was piqued by the then newly-developing subject of electricity. After graduating from Yale in 1810, he lived in England, studying art, exhibiting his work at the Royal Academy in 1813 and spending roughly 10 years as an itinerant artist specializing in portraiture, unaware that his passing interest in electromagnetism would eventually revolutionize global communication. The electric telegraph makes use of the relationship between magnetism and electricity. During the early 1790s, the Italian scientist Alessandro Volta invented an electrochemical cell that made a steady source of electric current available. In 1820, the Danish physicist Hans Christian Oersted discovered that an electric current will cause a magnetized needle to move. This principle is the basis of the telegraph, in which a current is varied systematically according to a code. [As a telegraph key is moved up and down, it makes or breaks an electric circuit and transmits a signal as a series of electric pulses.] In 1825 the British electrician William Sturgeon invented the electromagnet, and physicists William F. Cooke and Charles Wheatstone, working together in Great Britain, used this discovery to develop a rudimentary telegraph in 1837.

4. The Infography About Physics -- History
Sources recommended by a professor who specializes in the study of the history of physics.Category Science Physics History...... physics. THE INFOGRAPHY, Physics History. present). A professional journal,mostly about physics history. http//www.ucpress.edu/journals/hsps/.
http://www.infography.com/content/950283284275.html
Search The Infography:
Physics History
An expert whose research specialty is the history of physics recommends these sources.
Six Superlative Sources
Cohen, I. Bernard. The Birth of a New Physics, rev. ed. (Norton, 1985). Kragh, Helge. Quantum Generations. A History of Physics in the Twentieth Century (Princeton University Press, 1999). Purrington, Robert D. Physics in the Nineteenth Century (Rutgers University Press, 1997). Weaver, Jefferson H., ed. The World of Physics: A Small Library of the Literature of Physics from Antiquity to the Present. 3 vols. (Simon and Schuster, 1987). The American Institute of Physics Center for History of Physics . Numerous exhibits, resources and links. http://www.aip.org/history/
Other Excellent Sources
Holton, Gerald, and Stephen Brush. Physics, the Human Adventure: From Copernicus to Einstein and Beyond (Rutgers University Press, 2001). Fowler, Michael. Galileo and Einstein (University of Virginia). Lecture Notes by a physics professor about the history of physics, from the Greeks to Einstein. http://galileoandeinstein.physics.virginia.edu/ Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences (University of California Press, 1969-present). A professional journal, mostly about physics history. http://www.ucpress.edu/journals/hsps/

5. Physics History
Find a list of books covering general physics history, biographies and primary sources for perusal. Includes links to ordering. physics history. Physics Biography. General physics history. Physics Classics
http://www.treasure-troves.com/books/PhysicsHistory.html
Physics History

http://www.ericweisstein.com/encyclopedias/books/PhysicsHistory.html

6. Physics Central Physics Links - Physics History
A Century of Physics Navigate through a timeline of the history of physicsin the 20th century and beyond…. Center for the History of Physics.
http://www.physicscentral.com/resources/history.html
buckyball best teacher resources interactive sites physics history ... other favorites
beginner general advanced A Century of Physics
Navigate through a timeline of the history of physics in the 20th century and beyond… 100th anniversary of electron
celebrates the discovery of the electron. By Institute of Physics. Transistor
PBS program site on the legacy of the transistor Center for the History of Physics Exhibits and online source materials for history of physics and allied fields by the American Institute of Physics Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics
A documented archive of information about 20th century women who have made original and important contributions to physics before 1976
Beginner: for people of all ages who are just beginning to discover the world of physics General: for those who are now taking or have taken, the equivalent of a high school physics course Advanced: beyond the level of high school physics

7. CONTRIBUTIONS OF 20TH CENTURY WOMEN TO PHYSICS
Some physics history. 500+ Books and Articles
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp
Welcome to CWP at UCLA
86 Eminent Physicists

Search the Archive
Fascinating Documents

Annotated Photo Gallery

In Her Own Words . . .

Some Physics History
...

INTRODUCTION
Presented here is an archive of data on 86 twentieth century women who have made original and important contributions to physics. The citations describe and document their major contributions and provide biographical information pertaining to the scientific lives of the women. A POSTER The archive is limited to citations of 20th century women whose contributions to physics were published before 1976. CLICK HERE TO SEARCH FOR NAMES OF WOMEN YOU KNOW
There are women who are not cited whose contributions before 1976 qualify them to be included. It has not been possible, with the resources available to us, to reach completion in this sense. As in the history of most areas of human endeavor, in physics women are disappeared people. If this research project were to continue, there would be more women, known and unknown to us at present, with citations here.
Only fully researched citations are presented. The CWP database contains the names of many more women than have citations posted in this website. Unfortunately resources were not available to process citations for all the women originally cited. (

8. Physics History
info prev up next, search book cdrom email home. physics history.Physics Biography; General physics history; Physics Classics. © 1995
http://www.ericweisstein.com/encyclopedias/books/PhysicsHistory.html
Physics History

http://www.ericweisstein.com/encyclopedias/books/PhysicsHistory.html

9. General Physics History
General physics history. Bauer, Edmond. L'electromagnétique, hier et aujourd'hui. TheLife and Times of Modern physics history of Physics II. AIP, 1992.
http://www.ericweisstein.com/encyclopedias/books/GeneralPhysicsHistory.html
General Physics History
Bauer, Edmond. Paris: Albin Michel, 1949. Brunet, Pierre. Paris: A. Blanchard, 1931. Buchwald, Jed Z. From Maxwell to Microphysics: Aspects of Electromagnetic Theory in the Last Quarter of the Nineteenth Century. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1985. 339 p. $22.95. Casimir, Hendrik Brugt Gerhard. Haphazard Reality: Half a Century of Science. New York: Harper and Row, 1983. $?. Chandrasekhar, S. Newton's Principia for the Common Reader. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995. 624 p. $189.50. Crease, Robert P. and Mann, Charles C. The Second Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Twentieth-Century Physics. New York: Macmillan, 1986. 480 p. $21.95. d'Abro, A. The Evolution of Scientific Thought from Newton to Einstein, 2nd ed., rev. and enl. New York: Dover, 1950. $?. d'Abro, A. The Rise of the New Physics: Its Mathematical and Physical Theories, 2nd ed., Vol. 1. New York: Dover, 1952. 426 p. $7.95. d'Abro, A. The Rise of the New Physics: Its Mathematical and Physical Theories, 2nd ed., Vol. 2. New York: Dover, 1952. 982 p. (total).

10. CWP At Physics.UCLA.edu//Some Physics History
Copyright Notice. SOME HISTORY. Gold Medal of the Danish Academy Awarded to KristineBjerrum Meyer in 1898 CONTRIBUTIONS OF WOMEN TO EARLY NUCLEAR PHYSICS.
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/dev/samhist.1.html
Welcome to CWP at UCLA
86 Eminent Physicists

Search the Archive
Fascinating Documents

Annotated Photo Gallery

In Her Own Words

500+ Books and Articles
...
Colleagues

SOME HISTORY

11. CWP At Physics.UCLA.edu//Some Physics History
500+ Books and Articles. SOME HISTORY. Gold Medal of the Danish Academy Awarded toKristine Bjerrum Meyer in 1898 CONTRIBUTIONS OF WOMEN TO EARLY NUCLEAR PHYSICS.
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/articles/samhist.html
Welcome to CWP at UCLA
86 Eminent Physicists

Search the Archive
Fascinating Documents

Annotated Photo Gallery

In Her Own Words

500+ Books and Articles

SOME HISTORY

12. Physics History
Physics Chronology From the Copernican Revolution to superstrings, a chronologyof some of the greatest discoveries of natural philosophy.
http://webplaza.pt.lu/fklaess/html/HISTORIA.HTML
Physics Chronology From the Copernican Revolution to superstrings, a chronology of some of the
greatest discoveries of natural philosophy.
Despite my best efforts I cannot be sure about the accuracy of all the dates
and attributions.
1269: Pierre de Maricourt, experiments with magnets
1325: Jean Buridan, physics of impetus
1450: Johann Gutenberg, first printing press in Europe
1472: Johannes Regiomontanus, observation of Halley's comet
1551: G. Cardan, studies of falling bodies
1553: Giambattista Benedetti, proposed equality of fall rates
1543: Nicolaus Copernicus, heliocentric theory
1572: Tycho Brahe, witnesses a supernova and cites it as evidence that the heavens are not changeless 1576: Tycho Brahe, constructs a planetary observatory 1576: Thomas Digges, illustration of an infinite universe surrounding a Copernican solar system 1577: Tycho Brahe, observes that a comet passes through the orbits of othe planets 1582: Galilei Galileo, constancy of period of pendulum 1586: Simon Stevin, statics of inclined plane 1586: Simon Stevin, verification of equality of fall rates

13. Www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/hstm/hstm_spe.htm
Similar pages www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/hstm/hstm_physics.htm Similar pages More results from www.asap.unimelb.edu.au Stanford University Department of physics history Physics Department History.
http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/hstm/hstm_spe.htm

14. Harvard University Department Of Physics History
Physics at Harvard was advanced in 1726, when Thomas Hollis of London, England Still,he made history as one of the first American observers of astronomical
http://www.physics.harvard.edu/history.html
Harvard University
Department of Physics
History of the Department
The Early Years In 1642, physics was a required course in Harvard College -but the text was by Aristotle. Physics at Harvard was advanced in 1726, when Thomas Hollis of London, England, endowed a professorship in "Mathematicks and Experimental Philosophy" and also donated a shipment of scientific apparatus. In 1738 the second occupant of the Hollis chair, John Winthrop, introduced his students to Newton's Principia although, from a surviving manuscript, it is not clear whether he completely grasped Newton's Laws. Still, he made history as one of the first American observers of astronomical phenomena, such as the transits of Venus. Count Rumford (originally Benjamin Thompson of Woburn, Massachusetts), who is said to have bootlegged physics courses at Harvard when still a poor boy, became one of the discoverers of the Law of Conservation of Energy, and left the endowment for the Rumford Professorship in 1814.
Building a Laboratory
Jefferson Laboratory soon proved too small for such an expanding research agenda. In 1915 Cruft Laboratory opened and, under the direction of George W. Pierce, soon became the home of radio communication engineering. The New Research Laboratory linking Jefferson and Cruft was added in 1931. It was renamed Lyman Laboratory in 1947. While experimental research flourished, theoretical physics was not neglected. Edwin C. Kemble, a graduate student of Bridgman, was one of the first Americans to work on quantum theory. He joined the faculty in 1919, and his first graduate student was John H. Van Vleck. Later faculty colleagues Kemble, Van Vleck and Wendell H. Furry made the theoretical wing of the department unusually strong. During 1922-1935 one third of all theoretical physics Ph.D.s in the U.S. were awarded to their own students, or their students' students.

15. Upheaval In Physics: History Of The Light-Speed Debate
From Personal Update. Upheaval in physics history of the LightSpeedDebate. by Helen D. Setterfield. bhs4light@baptistmail.com. Ed
http://www.ldolphin.org/cdk-helen.html
From Personal Update Upheaval in Physics:
History of the Light-Speed Debate
by Helen D. Setterfield
bhs4light@baptistmail.com
Ed Note: We have been following Barry Setterfield's research on the speed of light since 1993. [1] It is interesting that both evolutionists and creation scientists can be blinded by their own presuppositions...] When we walk into a dark room, flip a switch and the light is instantly on, it seems that light has no speed but is somehow infinite - instantly there - and that was the majority opinion of scientists and philosophers until September 1676, when Danish astronomer Olaf Roemer announced to the Paris Academie des Sciences that the anomalous behavior of the eclipse times of Jupiter's inner moon, Io, could be accounted for by a finite speed of light. [2] His work and his report split the scientific community in half, involving strong opinions and discussions for the next fifty years. It was Bradley's independent confirmation of the finite speed of light, published January 1, 1729, which finally ended the opposition. [3] The speed of light was finite-incredibly fast, but finite. The following question was: "Is the speed of light constant?" Interestingly enough, every time it was measured over the next few hundred years, it seemed to be a little slower than before. This could be explained away, as the first measurements were unbelievably rough compared to the technical accuracy later. It was not that simple, though. When the same person did the same test using the same equipment at a later period in time, the speed was slower. Not much, but slower.

16. Physics History

http://www.elanco.k12.pa.us/schools/gshs/departments/science/Physics/Physics_His
Go to.... Click To Navigate The GSHS Physics Site! GSHS Home Page Departments Science Department Physics Mr. Eller's Homepage Academic Physics AP Physics Applied Physics Physics Online Tutorials Physics History Quantum Mechanics Theory of Relativity String Theory Physics News Physics Humor Internet Resources Biographies Women in Science www.ELANCO New Holland www.ELANCO credits Physics Topics GSHS Home Departments Science Department Physics Department ... www.ELANCO
Eastern Lancaster County School District
P.O. Box 609
669 East Main Street
New Holland, PA, USA 17557
www.ELANCO Credits
Historical Overview of the Development of Physics throughout the Centuries This site will provide you with links to time lines and other historical information about the development of Physics throughout the centuries. You will also find links to sites which provide tutorials and related information about Quantum Mechanics, Theory of Relativity, Particle Physics, Black Holes and the newest ideas physicists have on how to unify Quantum Mechanics and the Theory of Relativity. The intention of this site is to be a 'work in progress' by providing updates on the newest developments in physics theory and research on an ongoing basis. A Walk Through Time This site by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) provides the reader with an interesting look at the history of time keeping from ancient times to our current methods.

17. GS Physics
Home Page Physics Home Page Academic Physics AP Physics Applied Physics Physics Online Tutorials Physics Humor physics history Physics News
http://www.elanco.k12.pa.us/schools/gshs/departments/science/Physics/AcademicPhy
Science Home Page Physics Home Page
Academic Physics
AP Physics ... Women in Science Historical Overview of the Development of Physics throughout the Centuries This site will provide you with links to time lines and other historical information about the development of Physics throughout the centuries. You will also find links to sites which provide tutorials and related information about Quantum Mechanics, Theory of Relativity, Particle Physics, Black Holes and the newest ideas physicists have on how to unify Quantum Mechanics and the Theory of Relativity. The intention of this site is to be a 'work in progress' by providing updates on the newest developments in physics theory and research on an ongoing basis. A Walk Through Time This site by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) provides the reader with an interesting look at the history of time keeping from ancient times to our current methods. Historical Background of the SI-System This NIST reference site provides information in the history of the SI system as well as definitions and historical contexts on the fundamental units meter kilogram second ampere ... mole , and candela Universes A look at how our view of the universe changed through the centuries.

18. Physics: History: Engineering Physics
fully accredited programs in the nation. And our Engineering Physicsdegree program is the only one in New England! Back to History
http://inferno.asap.um.maine.edu/physics/timeline/EngPhysics.html
Engineering Physics Curriculum In 1938 a radically new academic curriculum was developed for engineering and physics students providing an equitable mix of traditional physics courses and select engineering courses. The University of Maine shares (with the University of Kansas) the national distinction of being one of the first such programs to be accredited by the Engineers Council of Professorial Development (ECPD) in 1949. The University of Maine Engineering Physics curriculum has maintained this accreditation for nearly a half century. We are currently one of only ten fully accredited programs in the nation. And our Engineering Physics degree program is the only one in New England! Back to History

19. Physics: History....Timeline

http://inferno.asap.um.maine.edu/physics/timeline/timeline.html

20. KSU Libraries -- Math/Physics History
Math/Physics Library History. The Math/Physics Library is located in Cardwell Halland has been in that location since Cardwell Hall was completed in 1963.
http://www.lib.ksu.edu/branches/physics/history.html
Math/Physics Library History
The Math/Physics Library is located in Cardwell Hall and has been in that location since Cardwell Hall was completed in 1963. Prior to 1963, the collection formed part of the Chemistry and Physics Library located in Willard Hall. The Math/Physics Library contains over 20,000 volumes and currently receives roughly 300 serial titles.
In a typical recent year, these two of the university's 65 departments brought in 2.9M research grant dollars to the university (with Physics Department grants constituting nearly 85% of the combined total). From these grant dollars, 1.24M+ dollars, which is roughly 34% of the university's total "overhead" budget, was generated. Additionally, the Mathematics Department has the highest number of student credit hours taught by any department at the university. The Math/Physics Library exists, in part, to provide direct information access/assistance so that physics and mathematics faculty members can continue to generate this high level of financial contribution to the university's non-legislatively appropriated budget and teaching contribution to the university's educational mission. visitor number since 6/27/00
Maintained by B. Steward

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