Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


Pions to Quarks

Pions to Quarks

Pions to Quarks

Particle Physics in the 1950s
Laurie Mark Brown
Max Dresden
Lillian Hoddeson
January 2009
Available
Paperback
9780521100731
£51.99
GBP
Paperback
USD
eBook

    Editors Laurie Brown, Max Dresden and Lillian Hoddeson have assembled a prestigious group of physicists and historians of science to present a broadly balanced picture of this exciting scientific era that witnessed the coming of age of particle physics and its development into 'big science'. The historical studies and analyses provided in the volume are unique in their scope and level of detail. Major topics and developments addressed include the important experiments and their theoretical explanations, the design and construction of scientific instruments and the establishment of major research centres - especially the national laboratories that played a key role in the transformation of particle physics into 'big science'. These essays also range from sociological analyses of the particle physics subculture and the political aspects of research funding to discussions of symmetry and axiomatic field theory.

    Product details

    January 2009
    Paperback
    9780521100731
    768 pages
    229 × 152 × 38 mm
    1.11kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Introduction
    • 1. Pions to quarks: particle physics in the 1950s Laurie M Brown, Max Dresden and Lillian Hoddeson
    • 2. Particle physics in the early 1950s Chen Ning Yang
    • 3. An historian's interest in particle physics J. L. Heilbron
    • Part II. Particle discoveries in cosmic rays
    • 4. Cosmic-ray cloud-chamber contributions to the discovery of the strange particles in the decade 1947–1957 George D. Rochester
    • 5. Cosmic-ray work with emulsions in the 1940s and 1950s Donald H. Perkins
    • Part III. High-energy nuclear physics
    • Learning about nucleon resonances with pion photoproduction Robert L. Walker
    • 7. A personal view of nucleon structure as revealed by electron scattering Robert Hofstadter
    • 8. Comments on electromagnetic form factors of the nucleon Robert G. Sachs and Kameshwar C. Wali
    • Part IV. The new laboratory
    • 9. The making of an accelerator physicist Matthew Sands
    • 10. Accelerator design and construction in the 1950s John P. Blewett
    • 11. Early history of the Cosmotron and AGS Ernest D. Courant
    • 12. Panel on accelerators and detectors in the 1950s Lawrence W. Jones, Luis W. Alvarez, Ugo Amaldi, Robert Hofstadter, Donald W. Kerst, Robert R. Wilson
    • 13. Accelerators and the Midwestern Universities Research Association in the 1950s Donald W. Kerst
    • 14. Bubbles, sparks and the postwar laboratory Peter Galison
    • 15. Development of the discharge (spark) chamber in Japan in the 1950s Shuji Fukui
    • 16. Early work at the Bevatron: a personal account Gerson Goldhaber
    • 17. The discovery of the antiproton Owen Chamberlain
    • 18. On the antiproton discovery Oreste Piccioni
    • Part V. The Strange Particles
    • 19. The hydrogen bubble chamber and the strange resonances Luis W. Alvarez
    • 20. A particular view of particle physics in the fifties Jack Steinberger
    • 21. Strange particles William Chinowsky
    • 22. Strange particles: production by Cosmotron beams as observed in diffusion cloud chambers William B. Fowler
    • 23. From the 1940s into the 1950s Abraham Pais
    • Part VI. Detection of the neutrino Frederick Reines
    • 25. Recollections on the establishment of the weak-interaction notion Bruno M. Pontecorvo
    • 26. Symmetry and conservation laws in particle physics in the fifties Louis Michel
    • 27. A connection between the strong and weak interactions Sam B. Treiman
    • Part VII. Weak interactions and parity nonconservation
    • 29. The nondiscovery of parity nonconservation Allan Franklin
    • 30. K-meson decays and parity violation Richard H. Dalitz
    • 31. An Experimentalist's Perspective Val L. Fitch
    • 32. The early experiments leading to the V – A interaction Valentine L. Telegdi
    • 33. Midcentury adventures in particles physics E. C. G. Sudarshan
    • Part VIII. The particle physics community
    • 34. The postwar political economy of high-energy physics Robert Seidel
    • 35. The history of CERN during the early 1950s Edoardo Amaldi
    • 36. Arguments pro and contra the European laboratory in the participating countries Armin Hermann
    • 37. Physics and excellences of the life it brings Abdus Salam
    • 38. Social aspects of Japanese particle physics in the 1950s Michiji Konuma
    • Part IX. Theories of hadrons
    • 39. The early S-matrix theory and its propagation (1942–1952) Helmut Rechenberg
    • 40. From field theory to phenomenology: the history of dispersion relations Andy Pickering
    • 41. Particles as S-matrix poles: hadron democracy Geoffrey F. Chew
    • 42. The general theory of quantised fields in the 1950s Arthur S. Wrightman
    • 43. The classification and structure of hadrons Yuval Ne'eman
    • 44. Gauge principle, vector-meson dominance and spontaneous symmetry breaking Yoichiro Nambu
    • Part X. Personal overviews
    • 45. Scientific impact of the first decade of the Rochester conferences (1950–1960) Robert E. Marshak
    • 46. Some reflections on the history of particle physics in the 1950s Silvan S. Schweber
    • 47. Progress in elementary particle theory 1950–1964 Murray Gell-Mann.
      Contributors
    • Laurie M. Brown, Max Dresden, Lillian Hoddeson, Chen Ning Yang, J. L. Heilbron, George D. Rochester, Donald H. Perkins, Robert L. Walker, Robert Hofstadter, Robert G. Sachs, Kameshwar C. Wali, Matthew Sands, John P. Blewett, Lawrence W. Jones, Luis W. Alvarez, Ugo Amaldi, Robert Hofstadter, Donald W. Kerst, Robert R. Wilson, Ernest D. Courant, Donald W. Kerst, Peter Galison, Shuji Fukui, Owen Chamberlain, Oreste Piccioni, Luis W. Alvarez, Jack Steinberger, William Chinowsky, William B. Fowler, Abraham Pais, Frederick Reines, Bruno M. Pontecorvo, Louis Michel, Sam B. Treiman, Allan Franklin, Richard H. Dalitz, Val L. Fitch, Valentine L. Telegdi, E. C. G. Sudarshan, Robert Seidel, Edoardo Amaldi, Armin Hermann, Abdus Salam, Michiji Konuma, Helmut Rechenberg, Andy Pickering, Geoffrey F. Chew, Arthur S. Wrightman, Yuval Ne'eman, Yoichiro Nambu, Robert E. Marshak, Silvan S. Schweber, Murray Gell-Mann

    • Editors
    • Laurie Mark Brown
    • Max Dresden
    • Lillian Hoddeson