Box 3
Contains 14 Results:
Scientific American reprints, 1949
Includes: Kamen, "Tracers;" Davis, "Low Temperature Physics;" Harlow, "Learning to Think;" and Hurley, "Radioactivity and Time."
Scientific American reprints, 1950
Includes: Seaborg and Perlman, "Synthetic Elements I;" Einstein, "On the Generalized Theory;" Furth, "Limits of Measurement;" and Wald, "Eye and Camera."
Scientific American reprints, 1951
Includes: Mayer, "Structure of the Nucleus;" Gray, "Ultracentrifuge;" Ittelson and Kilpatrick, "Experiments in Perception;" and Morrison, "Neutron."
Scientific American reprints, 1952
Includes: Deevey, "Radiocarbon Dating;" Darrow, "Quantum Theory;" Wexler, "Volcanoes and World Climate;" McDonald, "Coriolis Effect;" Urey, "Origin of the Earth;" and Wannier, "Nature of Solids."
Scientific American reprints, 1953
Includes: Nier, "Mass Spectrometer;" Dyson, "Field Theory;" Hughes, "Nuclear Reactor as a Research Instrument;" Landsberg, "Origin of the Atmosphere;" Schrödinger, "What is Matter?;" Bethe, "What Holds the Nucleus Together?;" Rossi, "Where Do Cosmic Rays Come From?;" and Piaget, "How Children Form Mathematical Concepts."
Scientific American reprints, 1954
Includes: Wald, "Origin of Life;" Prener and Sullenger, "Phosphors;" and Panofsky, "Linear Accelerator."
Scientific American reprints, 1955
Includes: Terman, "Are Scientists Different?;" Mausner, "Study of the Anti-Scientific Attitude;" Glaser, "Bubble Chamber;" Tuttle, "Origin of Granite;" Cluff and Schetky, "Dislocations in Metals;" Kay, "Origin of Continents;" Heiskanen, "Earth's Gravity;" and Weisskpof and Rosenbaum, "Model of the Nucleus."
Scientific American reprints, 1956
Includes: Morrison, "Neutrino;" Yagoda, "Tracks of Nuclear Particles;" Segrè and Wiegand, "Antiproton;" Hofstadter, "Atomic Nucleus;" Miller, "Information and Memory;" Sietz and Wigner, "Effects of Radiation on Solides;" Fowler, "Origin of the Elements:" Hoyle, "Steady-State Universe;" Gamow, "Evolutionary Universe;" Sandage, "Red-Shift;" De Benedetti, "Mesonic Atoms;" Starr, "General Circulation of the Atmosphere;" and Seaborg and Ghiorso, "Synthetic Elements II."
Scientific American reprints, 1957
Includes: Marshak, "Pions;" Lyons, "Age of the Solar System;" Morrison, "Overthrow of Parity;" Gell-Mann and Rosenbaum, "Elementary Particles;" Ivey, "Electroluminescence;" Bèkèsy, "Ear;" Matthias, "Superconductivity;" and Post, "Fusion Power."
Scientific American reprints, 1958
Includes: Gamow, "Principle of Uncertainty;" Wilson, "Particle Accelerators;" Michels, "Teaching of Elementary Physics;" Burbidge and Hoyle, "Anti-Matter;" Rosenbaum, "Teaching of Elementary Mathematics;" Lifshitz, "Superfluidity;" Pake, "Magnetic Resonance;" Rock, "Repetition and Learning;" Spitzer, "Stellarator;" Joffe, "Revival of Thermoelectricity;" and Gordon, "Maser."
Scientific American reprints, 1959
Scientific American reprints, 1960
Includes: Buchhold, "Applications of Superconductivity;" Marshack, "Nuclear Force;" De Benedetti, "Mössbauer Effect;" Gibson and Walk, "Visual Cliff;" Derjaguin, "Force Between Molecules;" Bernal, "Structure of Liquids;" Soewenstein, "Biological Transducers;" Butterfield, "Scientific Revolution;" Deevey, "Human Population;" Reynolds, "Age of the Elements in the Solar System;" and Reif, "Superfluidity and 'Quasi-Particles.'"
Scientific American reprints, 1961
Includes: Benzinger, "Human Thermostat;" Wilson, "New Scale of Stellar Distances;" Gamow, "Gravity;" Fantz, "Origin of Form Perception;" Schawlow, "Optical Masers;" Pritchard, "Stabilized Images on the Retina;" and Penman, "Muon."