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American physics comes of age.

NOV 01, 1981
Photographs from the past five decades to appeal to the collective nostalgia of the physics community

DOI: 10.1063/1.2914353

Physics Today

Before the 1930s, physics was mostly a European enterprise. To be sure, there were many substantial contributions from this side of the Atlantic, but most of these came from a few isolated contributors, such as Joseph Henry, Josiah Willard Gibbs and Henry Rowland. Albert Michelson, one of the last of this breed of American physicists, died in 1931. Beginning in the 1930s, American physics began to rival—and in later decades to dominate—European physics. To illustrate the growth, we have selected a few photographs for each of the past five decades. Our selection, clearly, cannot be complete or objective. We merely mean to appeal to the collective nostalgia of physicists and to suggest how things have changed.

This Content Appeared In
pt-cover_1981_11.jpeg

Volume 34, Number 11

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