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The age of innocence : nuclear physics between the first and second world wars / Roger H. Stuewer.

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Oxford Scholarship Online: Physics Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Stuewer, Roger H., author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Nuclear physics--History.
Nuclear physics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource : illustrations (black and white)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018.
Summary:
"The two decades between the first and second world wars saw the emergence of nuclear physics as the dominant field of experimental and theoretical physics, owing to the work of an international cast of gifted physicists. Prominent among them were Ernest Rutherford, George Gamow, the husband and wife team of Frederic and Irene Joliot-Curie, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton, Gregory Breit and Eugene Wigner, Lise Meitner and Otto Robert Frisch, the brash Ernest Lawrence, the prodigious Enrico Fermi, and the incomparable Niels Bohr. Their experimental and theoretical work arose from a quest to understand nuclear phenomena; it was not motivated by a desire to find a practical application for nuclear energy. In this sense, these physicists lived in an 'Age of Innocence'. They did not, however, live in isolation. Their research reflected their idiosyncratic personalities; it was shaped by the physical and intellectual environments of the countries and institutions in which they worked. It was also buffeted by the political upheavals after the Great War: the punitive postwar treaties, the runaway inflation in Germany and Austria, the Great Depression, and the intellectual migration from Germany and later from Austria and Italy. Their pioneering experimental and theoretical achievements in the interwar period therefore are set within their personal, institutional, and political contexts. Both domains and their mutual influences are conveyed by quotations from autobiographies, biographies, recollections, interviews, correspondence, and other writings of physicists and historians." -- Publisher's description.
Contents:
Cambridge and the Cavendish
European and nuclear disintegration
Vienna and the Institute for Radium Research
The Cambridge-Vienna controversy
The quantum-mechanical nucleus
Nuclear electrons and nuclear structure
New Particles
New Machines
Nuclear physicists at the crossroads
Exiles and immigrants
Artificial radioactivity
Beta decay redux, slow neutrons, Bohr and his realm
New theories of nuclear reactions
The plague spreads to Austria and Italy
The new world.
Notes:
This edition previously issued in print: 2018.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-19-186658-X
0-19-256290-8

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