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Image and logic : a material culture of microphysics / Peter Galison.
Van Pelt Library QC173.4.M5 G35 1997
Available
Van Pelt Library QC173.4.M5 G35 1997
By Request
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Galison, Peter, 1955-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Microphysics--History--20th century.
- Physics--Experiments--History--20th century.
- Physical instruments--History--20th century.
- Physical instruments.
- History.
- Physics--Experiments.
- Microphysics.
- Physical Description:
- xxv, 955 pages : illustrations, plans ; 24 cm
- Other Title:
- Image & logic
- Place of Publication:
- Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1997.
- Summary:
- "I want to get at the blown glass of the early cloud chambers and the oozing noodles of wet new clear emulsion; to the sounding crack of a high-voltage spark arcing across a high-tension chamber and leaving the lab stinking of ozone; to the silent, darkened room, with row after row of scanners sliding trackballs across projected bubble-chamber images. Pictures and pulses -- I want to know where they came from, how pictures and counts got to be the bottom-line data of physics" (from the preface).
- Image and Logic is the most detailed engagement to date with the impact of modern technology on what it means to "do" physics and to be a physicist. At the beginning of this century, physics was usually done by a lone researcher who put together experimental apparatus on a benchtop. Now experiments frequently are larger than a city block, and experimental physicists live very different lives: programming computers, working with industry, coordinating vast teams of scientists and engineers, and playing politics.
- Peter Galison probes the material culture of experimental microphysics to reveal how the ever-increasing scale and complexity of apparatus have distanced physicists from the very science that drew them into experimenting and have fragmented microphysics into different technical traditions much as apparatus has fragmented atoms to get at the fundamental building blocks of matter. At the same time, the necessity for teamwork in operating multimillion-dollar machines has created dynamic "trading zones", where instrument makers, theorists, and experimentalists meet, share knowledge, and coordinate the extraordinarily diverse pieces of the culture of modern microphysics: work, machines,evidence, and argument.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 849-902) and index.
- Local Notes:
- Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Edward Potts Cheyney Memorial Fund.
- ISBN:
- 0226279162
- 0226279170
- OCLC:
- 36103882
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