Bültmann & Gerriets
Leadership and Creativity
A History of the Cavendish Laboratory, 1871-1919
von Dong-Won Kim
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
Reihe: Archimedes Nr. 5
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ISBN: 9789401720557
Auflage: 2002
Erschienen am 18.04.2013
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 226 Seiten

Preis: 139,09 €

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Acknowledgments. List of Abbreviations. Introduction.
1: The Beginning of the Cavendish Traditions, 1871-1879.
1.1. Preparing the Way. 1.2. Physics Education at Cambridge during the 1870s. 1.3. Three Cavendish Traditions: Maxwell's Legacy as director of the Cavendish Laboratory. 1.4. Researchers and Researches.
2: Rayleigh's Directorship, 1880-1884.
2.1. The Election of Lord Rayleigh. 2.2. Organizational Changes. 2.3. Rayleigh's Determination of the Ohm. 2.4. Researchers and Researches. 2.5. Rayleigh and the Continuation of Maxwell's Guidelines for the Cavendish Laboratory.
3: J.J. Thomson's First Ten Years at the Cavendish, 1885-1894.
3.1. The Election of J.J. Thomson. 3.2. J.J. Thomson as a Researcher. 3.3. Consolidating the Organization of the Cavendish Laboratory. 3.4. Researchers and Researches. 3.5. Was there a 'Cavendish School' in 1894?
4: The Emergence of the Cavendish School, 1895-1900.
4.1. The 1895 Regulation. 4.2. J.J. Thomson and the Newcomers. 4.3. Organization. 4.4. Researchers and Researches. 4.5. The Emergence of the Cavendish School.
5: J.J. Thomson's Leadership and the Development of the Cavendish School, 1901-1914.
5.1. J.J. Thomson's Research in the New Century. 5.2. J.J. Thomson's Leadership and the Cavendish School. 5.3. Organization. 5.4. Researchers and Researches. 5.5. The Decline of J.J. Thomson's Leadership.
6: The End of an Era, 1914-1919.
6.1. World War Iand the Cavendish Laboratory. 6.2. The End of the Thomson Era.
References. Index.



Historical accounts of successful laboratories often consist primarily of reminiscences by their directors and the eminent people who studied or worked in these laboratories. Such recollections customarily are delivered at the celebration of a milestone in the history of the laboratory, such as the institution's fiftieth or one­ hundredth anniversary. Three such accounts of the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge have been recorded. The first of these, A History of the Cavendish Laboratory, 1871-1910, was published in 1910 in honor of the twenty­ fifth anniversary of Joseph John Thomson's professorship there. The second, The Cavendish Laboratory, 1874-1974, was published in 1974 to commemorate the one­ hundredth anniversary of the Cavendish. The third, A Hundred Years and More of Cambridge Physics, is a short pamphlet, also published at the centennial of the 1 Cavendish. These accounts are filled with the names of great physicists (such as James Clerk Maxwell, Lord Rayleigh, J. J. Thomson, Ernest Rutherford, and William Lawrence Bragg), their glorious achievements (for example, the discoveries of the electron, the neutron, and DNA) and interesting anecdotes about how these achievements were reached. But surely a narrative that does justice to the history of a laboratory must recount more than past events. Such a narrative should describe a living entity and provide not only details of the laboratory's personnel, organization, tools, and tool kits, but should also explain how these components interacted within 2 their wider historical, cultural, and social contexts.


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