ENCYCLOPEDIA of GEOMAGNETISM and PALEOMAGNETISM Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series
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Reginald Victor Jones CH FRS (1911-1997)
Catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Reginald Victor Jones CH FRS (1911-1997) by Alan Hayward NCUACS catalogue no. 95/8/00 R.V. Jones 1 NCUACS 95/8/00 Title: Catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Reginald Victor Jones CH FRS (1911-1997), physicist Compiled by: Alan Hayward Description level: Fonds Date of material: 1928-1998 Extent of material: 230 boxes, ca 5000 items Deposited in: Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College, Cambridge CB3 0DS Reference code: GB 0014 2000 National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists, University of Bath. NCUACS catalogue no. 95/8/00 R.V. Jones 2 NCUACS 95/8/00 The work of the National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists, and the production of this catalogue, are made possible by the support of the Research Support Libraries Programme. R.V. Jones 3 NCUACS 95/8/00 NOT ALL THE MATERIAL IN THIS COLLECTION MAY YET BE AVAILABLE FOR CONSULTATION. ENQUIRIES SHOULD BE ADDRESSED IN THE FIRST INSTANCE TO: THE KEEPER OF THE ARCHIVES CHURCHILL ARCHIVES CENTRE CHURCHILL COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE R.V. Jones 4 NCUACS 95/8/00 LIST OF CONTENTS Items Page GENERAL INTRODUCTION 6 SECTION A BIOGRAPHICAL A.1 - A.302 12 SECTION B SECOND WORLD WAR B.1 - B.613 36 SECTION C UNIVERSITY OF ABERDEEN C.1 - C.282 95 SECTION D RESEARCH TOPICS AND SCIENCE INTERESTS D.1 - D.456 127 SECTION E DEFENCE AND INTELLIGENCE E.1 - E.256 180 SECTION F SCIENCE-RELATED INTERESTS F.1 - F.275 203 SECTION G VISITS AND CONFERENCES G.1 - G.448 238 SECTION H SOCIETIES AND ORGANISATIONS H.1 - H.922 284 SECTION J PUBLICATIONS J.1 - J.824 383 SECTION K LECTURES, SPEECHES AND BROADCASTS K.1 - K.495 450 SECTION L CORRESPONDENCE L.1 - L.140 495 R.V. -
Stanley Keith Runcorn FRS (1922-1995)
Catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Stanley Keith Runcorn FRS (1922-1995) VOLUME 11 Section G: Societies and organisations by Timothy E. Powell and Caroline Thibeaud NCUACS catalogue no. 104/3/02 S.K. Runcorn 124 NCUACS 104/3/02 SECTION G SOCIETIES AND ORGANISATIONS G.1-G.732 G.1 ACADEMIA EUROPAEA G.2-G.6 AMERICAN GEOPHYSICAL UNION G.7-G.11 BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE G.12-G.63 COSPAR (COMMITTEE ON SPACE RESEARCH) G.64-G.67 DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY: ENERGY TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT UNIT G.68-G.76 EUROPEAN GEOPHYSICAL SOCIETY G.77 EUROPEAN PLANETARY GEOLOGY CONSORTIUM G.78-G.111 EUROPEAN SCIENCE FOUNDATION G.112-G.1S3 EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY G.1S4-G.230 INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION G.231-G.277 INTERNATIONAL UNION OF GEODESY AND GEOPHYSICS G.278 INTERNATIONAL UNION OF GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES G.279-G.294 INTER-UNION COMMISSION FOR STUDIES OF THE MOON G .29S-G .300 JOINT SERVICES WEST-EAST SAHARA EXPEDITION G.301, G.302 LIBERAL PARTY G.303-G.311 LUNAR SCIENCE INSTITUTE S.K. Runcorn 125 NCUACS 104/3/02 Societies and organisations G.312 METEORITICAL SOCIETY G.313 MINERALOLOGICAL SOCIETY G.314-G.319 MINISTRY OF SUPPLY G.320 MUSEUM OF NORTHERN ARIZONA G.321-G.333 NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION (NASA) G.334-G.338 NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION G.339-G.342 NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANISATION (NATO) G.343 NUFFIELD FOUNDATION G.344-G.365 POI\ITIFICAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES G.366 PROVINCIAAL UTRECHTS GENOOTSCHAP VAN KUISTEN EN WETENSCHAPPEN G.367-G.386 ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY G.387-G.731 ROYAL SOCIETY G.732 STANDING CONFERENCE OF PROFESSORS OF PHYSICS S.K. -
Zirker J.B. the Magnetic Universe (JHUP, 2009)(ISBN 080189302X
THE MAGNETIC UNIVERSE This page intentionally left blank J. B. ZIRKER THE MAGNETIC THE ELUSIVE TRACES OF AN INVISIBLE FORCE UNIVERSE THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS BALTIMORE © 2009 The Johns Hopkins University Press All rights reserved. Published 2009 Printed in the United States of America on acid- free paper 2 4 6 8 9 7 5 3 1 The Johns Hopkins University Press 2715 North Charles Street Baltimore, Mary land 21218- 4363 www .press .jhu .edu Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Zirker, Jack B. The magnetic universe : the elusive traces of an invisible force / J.B. Zirker. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN- 13: 978- 0- 8018- 9301- 8 (hardcover : alk. paper) ISBN- 10: 0- 8018- 9301- 1 (hardcover : alk. paper) ISBN- 13: 978- 0- 8018- 9302- 5 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN- 10: 0- 8018- 9302- X (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Magnetic fi elds. 2. Cosmic magnetic fi elds. 3. Magnetism. 4. Magnetosphere. 5. Heliosphere (Ionosphere) 6. Gravity. I. Title. QC754.2.M3Z57 2009 538—dc22 2008054593 A cata log record for this book is available from the British Library. The last printed pages of the book are an extension of this copyright page. Special discounts are available for bulk purchases of this book. For more information, please contact Special Sales at 410- 516- 6936 or [email protected]. The Johns Hopkins University Press uses environmentally friendly book materials, including recycled text paper that is composed of at least 30 percent post- consumer waste, whenever possible. All of our book papers are acid- free, and our jackets and covers are printed on paper with recycled content. -
The History Group's Silver Jubilee
History of Meteorology and Physical Oceanography Special Interest Group Newsletter 2, 2009 A VIEW FROM THE CHAIR arranges meetings which are full of interest. We need especially to convince students that the The following review of 2008, by the Group’s origins and growth of the atmospheric and Chairman, Malcolm Walker, was presented at oceanic sciences are not only fascinating but the History Group’s Annual General Meeting also important. All too many research students on 28 March 2009. are now discouraged from reading anything Without an enthusiastic and conscientious more than ten years old and, moreover, do not committee, there would be no History Group. My appear to want to read anything that is not on thanks to all who have served on the committee the Web. To this end, historians of science are this past year. Thanks especially to our fighting back. A network of bodies concerned Secretary, Sara Osman, who has not only with the history of science, technology, prepared the paperwork for committee meetings mathematics, engineering and medicine has and written the minutes but also edited and been formed and our Group is one of the produced the newsletter (and sent you network’s members. An issue taken up by the subscription reminders!). She left the Met Office network during the past year is the withdrawal of in January 2008 and has since worked in the Royal Society funding from the National library of Kingston University. Unfortunately, she Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of now wishes to relinquish the post of Secretary Contemporary Scientists, which is based in the and is stepping down after today’s meeting. -
SCIENCE and SUSTAINABILITY Impacts of Scientific Knowledge and Technology on Human Society and Its Environment
EM AD IA C S A C I A E PONTIFICIAE ACADEMIAE SCIENTIARVM ACTA 24 I N C T I I F A I R T V N Edited by Werner Arber M O P Joachim von Braun Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo SCIENCE and SUSTAINABILITY Impacts of Scientific Knowledge and Technology on Human Society and Its Environment Plenary Session | 25-29 November 2016 Casina Pio IV | Vatican City LIBRERIA EDITRICE VATICANA VATICAN CITY 2020 Science and Sustainability. Impacts of Scientific Knowledge and Technology on Human Society and its Environment Pontificiae Academiae Scientiarvm Acta 24 The Proceedings of the Plenary Session on Science and Sustainability. Impacts of Scientific Knowledge and Technology on Human Society and its Environment 25-29 November 2016 Edited by Werner Arber Joachim von Braun Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo EX AEDIBVS ACADEMICIS IN CIVITATE VATICANA • MMXX The Pontifical Academy of Sciences Casina Pio IV, 00120 Vatican City Tel: +39 0669883195 • Fax: +39 0669885218 Email: [email protected] • Website: www.pas.va The opinions expressed with absolute freedom during the presentation of the papers of this meeting, although published by the Academy, represent only the points of view of the participants and not those of the Academy. ISBN 978-88-7761-113-0 © Copyright 2020 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording, pho- tocopying or otherwise without the expressed written permission of the publisher. PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA SCIENTIARVM LIBRERIA EDITRICE VATICANA VATICAN CITY The climate is a common good, belonging to all and meant for all. -
California Institute of Technology Catalog 1957-8
Bulletin of the California Institute of Technology Catalog 1957-8 PAS ADEN A, CALIFORNIA BULLETIN OF THE CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY VOLUME 66 NUMBER 3 The California Institute of Technology Bulletin is published quarterly Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Pasadena, California, under the Act of August 24, 1912 CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY A College, Graduate School, and Institute of Research in Science, Engineering, and the Humanities CATALOG 1957 -1958 PUBLISHED BY THE INSTITUTE SEPTEMBER, 1957 PASADENA, CALIFORNIA CONTENTS PART ONE. GENERAL INFORMATION PAGE Academic Calendar .............................. __ ...... _.. _._._. __ . __ . __ . __ .. _____ 11 Board of Trustees ..................... _...................... _... __ ....... _.. ______ .. 15 Trustee Committees ......................... _..... __ ._ .. _____ .. _........... _... __ .. 16 Administrative Officers of the Institute ..... ___ ........... _.. _.. _.... 18 Faculty Officers and Committees, 1957-58 ... __ .. __ ._ .. _... _......... _.... 19 Staff of Instruction and Research-Summary ._._ .. ___ ... ___ ._. 21 Staff of Instruction and Research .... _. __ .. __ .... _____ ._ .. __ .... _ 38 Fellows, Scholars and Assistants _.. _: __ ... _..._ ...... __ . __ .. _ 66 California Institute Associates .... _... _ ... _._ .. _... __ ... ._ .. __ .. _.. 79 Historical Sketch .................... _..... __ ........... __ .. __ ... _.... _... _.. ____ . 83 Educational Policies ...... _.. __ .... __ . 88 Industrial Associates ........_. __ 91 Industrial -
Chapter 9 Physics Alumni 1851–1961
Chapter 9 Physics Alumni 1851–1961 Students 1871–76 The first student to graduate with a Victoria University (Owens College) degree in physics was Albert Griffiths in 1890. From 1867 until 1890, students registered for full time or part time courses and in some cases, proceeded to study for degree courses elsewhere. Schuster’s colleagues [6] listed some of the past students who had been connected with the Physical Laboratories, admitting that the list was not complete. 1867–72 John Henry Poynting 1868–70 Ernest Howard Griffiths 1871–76 Joseph John Thomson 1884–87 Charles Thomson Rees Wilson 1879–81 William Stroud 1880–82 Henry Stroud 1875–77 Arthur Mason Worthington Graduates 1890–1951 & Student group Photographs The degrees of PhD and DSc were first introduced in Manchester in 1918 and it was the norm before this time and for a period thereafter, for BSc 748 graduates to follow up with a one year MSc course. 1890 First Class: Albert Griffiths. Third Class: Ernest Edward Dentith Davies. Albert Griffiths Assoc. Owens 1890, MSc 1893, DSc 1899. After graduating, Albert Griffiths was a research student, fellow, demonstrator and lecturer at Owens between 1892 and 1898, in between posts at Freiburg, Southampton and Sheffield. He became Head of the Physics Department at Birkbeck in 1900. E E D Davies, born on the Isle of Man, obtained a BSc in mathematics in 1889, an MSc in 1892, a BA in 1893 before becoming a Congregational Minister in 1895. Joseph Thompson lists him [246], as a student at the Lancashire Independent College in 1893. -
History of Oceanography, Number 14
No. 14 September 2002 CONTENTS EDITORIAL........................................................................................................................ 1 IN MEMORIAM PHILIP F. REHBOCK............................................................................ ARTICLE.......................................................................................................................... Scientific research, management advice; evolution of ICES’s dual identity ICHO VII IN KALINGRAD 2003....................................................................................... CLASSES IN HISTORY OF MARINE SCIENCES........................................................... BOOK ANNOUNCEMENTS AND REVIEWS................................................................. KEITH RUNCORN PAPERS.............................................................................................. NEWS AND EVENTS........................................................................................................ ANNUAL BIBLIOGRAPHY AND BIOGRAPHIES.......................................................... INTERNATIONAL UNION OF THE HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE DIVISION OF THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE COMMISSION OF OCEANOGRAPHY President Eric L. Mills Department of Oceanography Dalhousie University Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4J1 CANADA Vice Presidents Jacqueline Carpine-Lancre La Verveine 7, Square Kraemer 06240 Beausoleil, FRANCE Margaret B. Deacon 3 Rewe Court, Heazille Barton Rewe, Exeter EX5 4HQ Devon, UNITED KINGDOM Walter Lenz Institut für Klima-und -
Spring 2018 (Pdf)
Spring 2018 The biology of being sedentary Marginal Voices: A quest to improve mental health diagnosis among the deaf community Clinical pharmacists in Primary Care: A safe solution to the workforce crisis? Should doctors be criminalised? Building a coaching culture across the medical school and beyond Spring 2018 In 2018, the National Health Service (NHS) celebrates its 70th anniversary. With the creation of the NHS in 1948, universal health coverage was finally implemented in the UK, with the NHS replacing the previous patchy health coverage schemes that had left many people with limited access to health services. Although the NHS has achieved much since 1948, in recent years we have seen the NHS facing new challenges such as the very slow real-terms per capita increase in NHS spending since the global financial crisis in 2008. In this edition of our newsletter, you can read about the work we are doing to help the NHS continue to deliver comprehensive and high-quality healthcare to the residents of the UK. This includes our work on the use of video-consultations and on using professional groups such as pharmacists to take on some of the work currently carried out by doctors. Professor Azeem Majeed Head of Department of Primary Care and Public Health Imperial College London We welcome feedback on the newsletter and are taking submissions for future issues. ARCHIVE Email your news, events, achievements and stories to us. [email protected] PCPH eMagazine Team Subscribe Unsubscribe Javier Gallego Mehrosa Memood Copyright © 2018 Department of Primary Care & Public Health, Imperial College London In the News Photo: Doctor by MIKI Yoshihito - Creative Commons A study published in the journal BMJ Quality and Safety concluded that extending GP opening hours will not ease the rising burden on Accident and Emergency departments. -
Evidence for a Shallow Thin Magnetic Structure and Solar Dynamo: the Driver of Torsional Oscillations
Draft manuscript no. SolarPaperJarboe October 10, 2018 Evidence for a shallow thin magnetic structure and solar dynamo: the driver of torsional oscillations T. R. Jarboe, T. E. Benedett, C. J. Everson, C. J. Hansen, A. C. Hossack, K. D. Morgan, B. A. Nelson, J.M. Penna, and D. A. Sutherland University of Washington, Seattle Washington, 98195 October 10, 2018 ABSTRACT The solar dynamo and the solar Global internal Magnetic Structure (GMS) appear to be a thin (∼2 Mm thick) structure near (∼1 Mm below) the solar surface. Evidence for these properties are found from the amplitude of the torsional oscillations and in their velocity contours relationship to solar magnetogram; the power to the chromosphere; power to the corona and the solar wind; the current in the helio-current-sheet measured at the radius of the orbit of Earth; the calculated size (∼1 Mm) of the expanding polar flux when it enters the photosphere; the dynamo forces the rigid rotation of the heliosphere with the Sun surface out to at least 1.4 au, giving the solar wind; and from the observation that solar magnetic activity is generated near the surface. A thin stable minimum energy state seems to be covering most of the solar surface just below the photosphere. The magnetic field lines should be parallel to the solar surface and rotate with distance from the surface for 2π radians in ∼2 Mm. Resistive diffusion helps to push the magnetic fields to the surface and the GMS seems to lose π radians every 11 years, causing the observed 180◦ flipping of the solar magnetic fields including the flipping of the polar flux. -
De Morgan Association NEWSLETTER
UCL DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS NEWSLETTER 2016/17 De Morgan Association NEWSLETTER UCL Mathematics Department The department is proud to recruit excellent in which a departments’ teaching and learning undergraduate students who, having typically provision are reviewed every 5-7 years. A team of achieved A*A*A at A-level (with the A*s in assessors visited the department early 2016 and Mathematics and Further Mathematics), are conducted a thorough review of our teaching- among the highest qualified entering UCL. That related practices and met with both students we do so in large numbers, annually recruiting a and staff. The IQR team reported that “overall first year cohort in excess of 200 students to our Mathematics operated effectively in delivering undergraduate programmes, is impressive and high quality undergraduate and postgraduate also makes the department one of the largest programmes as demonstrated by the design of at UCL in terms of numbers of undergraduate its programmes, its responsiveness to industry, students. and the high levels of satisfaction expressed by staff and students.’’ To sustain such large numbers of well-qualified students it is important that the department The IQR highlighted several items of good teaches well. This means many things of practice including our commitment to both course e.g. presenting mathematics clearly and student transition to higher education thoroughly, even inspiringly, in lectures; providing and to widening participation. The Undergraduate timely and useful feedback; offering a broad Colloquium was also singled out for praise. range of mathematically interesting modules In this activity, undergraduate students, with and projects; and providing effective support for support from the department, arrange their own students. -
Academic Publications Before 1940
A Century of Science Publishing E.H. Fredriksson (Ed.) IOS Press, Chapter Academic Publications before Alan Cook Selwyn College, Cambridge, UK Summary The overall scope of this book is scientific publishing from , but is a somewhat arbitrary date in the history of academic publishing which, for the most part from to was a continuation of that in earlier times. There were substantial changes from about and then after , so that it is natural to con- sider the hundred years between those dates as a whole. There were considerable advances in physics in , which also influenced chemistry, and they had conse- quences in publishing, but the journals founded before continued into the new century and relatively few new ones appeared after . The procedures and economics of academic publishing up to also remained much as they had been for almost two centuries. Thus something must be said about the development of academic publishing in science from the end of the seventeenth century onwards in order to understand its nature in the first half of the twentieth. That is the plan of this chapter. The physical sciences underwent greater developments and were generally more advanced by than were the biological sciences, and that is reflected in the greater prominence given to the physical journals in this essay. Most attention is also given to publishing in English, not because that in other languages was neg- ligble but because it was on the whole parallel, and the account of English language publishing covers most of the issues that arose in other languages. Early academic publishing in natural philosophy The natural philosophers who started the so-called scientific revolution about the middle of the seventeenth century differed from the hermetic scholars of the Renaissance who preceeded them by making their thoughts and discoveries public and by open correspondence with others at home and abroad.