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Books > Science & Mathematics > Science: general issues > History of science
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The Laser in America, 1950-1970 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,177
Discovery Miles 11 770
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The Laser in America, 1950-1970 (Paperback)
Series: The Laser in America, 1950-1970
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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In this book Joan Lisa Bromberg brings a historian's broad
perspective to bear on the formative years of laser research in the
United States. The laser has proved one of the most protean devices
of our century. A mere thirty years after its invention, it already
serves us in uses as varied as surgical instruments, "smart" bombs,
printers, audio devices, telephone communication, cloth cutting,
machining, and chemical research. In this book Joan Lisa Bromberg
brings a historian's broad perspective to bear on the formative
years of laser research in the United States. She demonstrates
that, as lasers have become a means to probe the structure and
changes of the physical universe, so the history of laser research
constitutes a probe with which we can penetrate the structure of
American science and engineering. The laser's history has been as
multifaceted as its applications. To the heterogeneity of the
groups that developed it, and the sheer size of the cast, must be
added the lengthy and bitter disputes that have been fought over
priority and patents. Bromberg does not set out to decide who is
"right"; instead she concentrates on placing the action in the
context of the postwar military, commercial, and academic interests
that defined it.Starting with the maser, an innovative device for
generating pure radio signals of centimeter wavelength, Bromberg
describes the conceptual leap that vaulted four orders of magnitude
to the laser with its pure beams of visible light. She shows how
the operation of the first successful laser sent the pace of
research skyrocketing in a research boom driven by a complex
combination of professional rewards and institutional pressures.
The book concludes with an epilogue by three laser
scientists-Arthur H. Guenther, Henry Kressel, and William
Krupke-that brings the technical history up to the present.
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