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E.U. Condon's major contributions were in atomic and molecular
physics and spectroscopy; his book with G.H. Shortley on The Theory
of Atomic Spectra dominated the field of spectroscopy for half a
century and remains an invaluable reference. He also played an
important role in the institutions of American science. He served
for many years as the editor of Reviews of Modern Physics, and with
Hugh Odishaw he edited the still widely used Handbook of Physics.
After World War II, Condon became director of the National Bureau
of Standards (now NIST), and helped to make it one of the premier
research laboratories in the physical sciences in the world. The
Selected Scientific Papers reprint many of the most important
contributions Condon made to atomic physics, quantum theory,
nuclear physics, condensed-matter physics and other fields. The
Selected Popular Writings contain articles he wrote on technical
topics for such journals as "The American Journal of Physics,
Science, and " "Nature," as well as reflections on education,
UFO's, and other topics.
0 e The selected popular writings contain articles he wrote on
technical topics for such journals as The American Journal of
Physics, Science, and Nature, as well as reflections on education,
UFO's, and other topics.
This 1984 book brings together 48 studies and essays written by
physicists from around the world to mark the 90th birthday of Louis
de Broglie and the 80th birthdays of Paul Dirac and Eugene Wigner.
Publication under one cover of studies based on the discoveries of
scientific personalities as diverse as those to whom this volume is
dedicated serves at least one important purpose: it concretely
reflects the rival pathways in quantum physics at the time of this
book's publication. From one perspective, the papers contrast the
strategies of a champion of the mathematical approach (Wigner) with
those of a thinker who relied on physical intuition (de Broglie).
From another, they compare the views of a defender (Wigner) and and
opponent of the Copenhagen school (de Broglie), as well as those of
an individual who helped to reconstruct the prevailing quantal
paradigm, only later to advocate a return to causality (Dirac).
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