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Full-Text Articles in Physics

A Ti-Hg Collision Cross Section, Edward E. Stepp, Richard A. Anderson Jul 1964

A Ti-Hg Collision Cross Section, Edward E. Stepp, Richard A. Anderson

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

The lifetime of the 63P1 state of Hg was observed as a function of Tl density at two different Hg pressures. From these data it appears that at high Tl densities the lifetime of the 63P1 state of Hg is controlled by collisions with Tl atoms. Using this assumption and simple gas kinetic theory, a cross section for these collisions was calculated.


Deflection Of An Electron Beam By Photons, Danning W. Bloom '64 May 1964

Deflection Of An Electron Beam By Photons, Danning W. Bloom '64

Honors Projects

The purpose of this paper was to review information, both experimental and theoretical, concerning the momentum carried by light and its effect on free electrons.


On The Calculation Of Multicenter Two-Electron Repulsion Integrals Involving Slater Functions, Russell A. Bonham, Jerry Peacher, Henry L. Cox May 1964

On The Calculation Of Multicenter Two-Electron Repulsion Integrals Involving Slater Functions, Russell A. Bonham, Jerry Peacher, Henry L. Cox

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

Integral transforms are used to evaluate many-center two-electron repulsion integrals involving Slater s-type functions. The reduction of a general four-center integral of this type to a form convenient for computational purposes is presented. The technique described has the important advantage that all lesser many-center and one-center integrals can be obtained from the four-center case by proper choice of constants. The form of the result is such that simple single-precision numerical techniques yield rapid and accurate evaluations of many-center integrals. Several numerical examples are presented.


Resonant Absorption Studies With Eu151, D. A. Shirley, Richard B. Frankel, H. H. Wickman Jan 1964

Resonant Absorption Studies With Eu151, D. A. Shirley, Richard B. Frankel, H. H. Wickman

Physics

No abstract provided.


An Introduction To The Special Theory Of Relativity, Robert Katz Jan 1964

An Introduction To The Special Theory Of Relativity, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

It is the purpose of this book to provide an introduction to the Special Theory of Relativity which is accessible to any student who has had an introduction to general physics and some slight acquaintance with the calculus. Much of the material is at a level suitable for high school students who have had advanced placement in physics and mathematics. Since some of the exposition, particularly part of Chapter 6, is presented here in book form for the first time, even terminal graduate students in physics may find the material profitable.

The Galilean Transformation
The Inertial Frame, 9; The Galilean …


Alpha-Decay Properties Of Some Erbium Isotopes Near The 82-Neutron Closed Shell, Ronald D. Macfarlane, Roger D. Griffioen Dec 1963

Alpha-Decay Properties Of Some Erbium Isotopes Near The 82-Neutron Closed Shell, Ronald D. Macfarlane, Roger D. Griffioen

University Faculty Publications and Creative Works

New alpha-emitting isotopes of erbium, lying near the 82-neutron closed shell, were produced by Nd142+O16 bombardments at incident energies up to 151 MeV. The nuclides studied and their alpha-decay properties are Nuclide Qα(MeV) Half-life Alpha branching ratio Er152 4.93±0.02 10.7±0.5 sec 0.90-0.20+0.05 Er153 4.80±0.02 36 ±2 sec 0.95-0.20+0.05 Er154 4.26±0.02 4.5±1.0 min... Alpha decay from erbium isotopes with Aobserved, indicating that the alpha-particle binding energies of these isotopes are considerably higher than those for the 84-, 85-, and 86-neutron isotopes. Alpha reduced widths, calculated from the results for Er152 and Er153, were found to be higher than the corresponding dysprosium, …


Decay Of Intensity Of Certain Hg Lines In An Hg-Ar Discharge, Edward E. Stepp, Richard A. Anderson Oct 1963

Decay Of Intensity Of Certain Hg Lines In An Hg-Ar Discharge, Edward E. Stepp, Richard A. Anderson

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

The afterglow of four mercury spectral lines was examined in a mercury-argon electric discharge. The 2537- Å line decays in a complex fashion with three definite modes of decay. The 4077-, 4358-, and 5461- Å lines exhibited an even more complicated decay. These lines exhibited an initial rapid decay followed by an increase in intensity. Finally the intensity of these lines went through two maxima before they decayed in intensity at a slow constant rate. The actual intensity behavior of the 2537- Å line was masked by the imprisonment of resonance radiation. It is postulated that the main processes governing …


Theory Of The Effect Of Temperature On The Electron Diffraction Patterns Of Diatomic Molecules, Russell A. Bonham, Jerry Peacher May 1963

Theory Of The Effect Of Temperature On The Electron Diffraction Patterns Of Diatomic Molecules, Russell A. Bonham, Jerry Peacher

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

The effect of temperature on the electron diffraction pattern of a diatomic molecule is considered from the standpoint of the simple kinematic scattering theory utilizing a quartic vibrational potential. The potential is obtained by an expansion of ħ2J( J+1)/2μr2+D exp[-2a(r-re)]-2D exp[-a(r-re)] about its minimum value r0. The second-order wavefunction for the nth vibrational and 7th rotational state of the system has been obtained, and expressions for the electron diffraction quantities rg, le 2, and M (s) have been computed. General results for the quantity M (s) …


Lattice Dynamics And Specific-Heat Data For Rocksalt-Structure Alkali Halides, Arnold Karo, John R. Hardy Mar 1963

Lattice Dynamics And Specific-Heat Data For Rocksalt-Structure Alkali Halides, Arnold Karo, John R. Hardy

John R. Hardy Papers

Vibrational distribution functions are derived for a number of rocksalt-structure alkali halides using a more refined treatment of the interionic forces than that provided by regarding them as rigid point charges. The dipole moment at any given ion site is calculated taking into account the contribution from the deformation of the electron distribution resulting from both polarization and overlap repulsion between nearest neighbors. In this way the dipole-dipole part of the Coulomb interaction is treated self-consistently.
Both room temperature and 0°K input parameters are used, and the derived specific-heat data are compared with experimental results. The over-all agreement with experiment …


On Science And Social Science, Robert Katz Jan 1963

On Science And Social Science, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

There are many definitions of science, and these are commonly based on literary and social usage rather than on the technical problem of distinguishing different areas of scholarship. To evolve an adequate definition we shall attempt to extract common elements from physics, biology, chemistry, geology, and astronomy, from those fields which are commonly called sciences. Any acceptable definition of science must be equally applicable to all of these, to all the natural sciences. To speak in the usual metaphor, we shall attempt a "scientific" definition of science.


Energy And Angular Distribution Of Electrons Ejected From Hydrogen And Helium Gas By Protons, M. Eugene Rudd, Theodore Jorgensen, Jr. Jan 1963

Energy And Angular Distribution Of Electrons Ejected From Hydrogen And Helium Gas By Protons, M. Eugene Rudd, Theodore Jorgensen, Jr.

M. Eugene Rudd Publications

Differential cross sections for ejection of secondary electrons of various energies at various angles were measured for hydrogen gas bombarded by 100-keV protons and for helium gas bombarded by 50-, l00-, and 150-keV protons. The range of angles investigated was 10° to 160° and the range of electron energies was 1 to 500 eV. A unique fixed-port, double-walled scattering chamber was used. Electrons were counted by an electron multiplier after passing through a 127° electrostatic analyzer. The efficiency of the detector was determined by replacing the analyzer and multiplier by a Faraday cup and making absolute measurements of cross sections …


Diffraction Of Spherical Scalar And Vector Waves At Axial Points Of A Circular Aperture And Disk, Keith Leon Mcdonald Jun 1962

Diffraction Of Spherical Scalar And Vector Waves At Axial Points Of A Circular Aperture And Disk, Keith Leon Mcdonald

Faculty Publications

The following work treats Kottler's saltus problem of diffraction of electromagnetic waves emitted by a Hertzian oscillator source and the analogous Kirchhoff's scalar problem of waves emitted by a point source. The medium is a homogeneous isotropic dielectric. In the vector case a new exact solution of the basic integrals is presented, at axial points only, (a) behind a circular aperture in a "black'' screen, and (b) behind its complementary "black'' disk. The relative time-averaged intensity of energy flow is plotted for the disk only. It is shown that the scalar theory predicts considerably larger values than the electromagnetic theory …


Using A Density Gradient Column To Determine Wheat Density, Wendell R. Peters, Robert Katz Feb 1962

Using A Density Gradient Column To Determine Wheat Density, Wendell R. Peters, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

A wheat kernel placed in a density gradient column will sink until it reaches the level where its average density is equal to that of the liquid at that level. Knowing the density of the liquid as a function of height, one can measure accurately the density of the kernel to three decimal places in about 1 to 2 minutes per kernel. Kernel density ranged from a maximum of 1.416 at 7.5% moisture to a minimum of 1.255 g./cm.3 at 18.5% moisture, for the samples tested. Kernels of a homogeneously selected sample of hard spring wheat (Lee) varied in …


The Magnetic Pole In The Formulation Of Electricity And Magnetism, Robert Katz Jan 1962

The Magnetic Pole In The Formulation Of Electricity And Magnetism, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

The use of the magnetic pole in the development of the concepts of electricity and magnetism leads unambiguously to a relativistic formulation of the field vectors which is well within the grasp of the sophomore student. The development is wholly consistent with Maxwell's equations and leads to clear and understandable definitions of the field vectors both in vacuum and in the material medium, as well as to the relations defining the transformations of the field vectors.


Glass-To-Sapphire End Window Seals, Edward E. Stepp, Richard A. Anderson Jan 1962

Glass-To-Sapphire End Window Seals, Edward E. Stepp, Richard A. Anderson

Physics Faculty Research & Creative Works

SAPPHIRE windows have been used in laboratory devices where radiation from the ultraviolet through the infrared must be transmitted. Sapphire windows have been valuable in chambers which contain the alkali metals, for the alkali metals are known to react with Pyrex 7740 glass and quartz leaving them pitted and darkened. This paper is a report on an improved glass-to-sapphire end window seal.


Transverse Mass And Gravitational Mass, Robert Katz Nov 1961

Transverse Mass And Gravitational Mass, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

A problem suggested by Professor Gamow deals with the relationship between the transverse mass and the gravitational mass: A steamroller of mass m moves horizontally, in the +x direction, with velocity v, in a region of space in which there is a gravitational field intensity g vertically downward. Find the weight of the moving steamroller.


A Note On K-Commutative Matrices, D. W. Robinson Nov 1961

A Note On K-Commutative Matrices, D. W. Robinson

Faculty Publications

Let A and B be square matrices over a field in which the minimum polynomial of A is completely reducible. It is shown that A is k commutative with respect to B for some non-negative integer k if and only if B commutes with every principal idempotent of A. The proof is brief, simplifying much of the previous study of k-commutative matrices. The result is also used to generalize some well-known theorems on finite matrix commutators that involve a complex matrix and its transposed complex conjugate.


Hardness And Moisture Content Of Wheat Kernels, Robert Katz, N. D. Collins, A. B. Cardwell Jul 1961

Hardness And Moisture Content Of Wheat Kernels, Robert Katz, N. D. Collins, A. B. Cardwell

Robert Katz Publications

The hardness of kernel sections of hard red winter and soft white winter wheat and durum wheat decreased with increasing moisture content. Small variations in hardness with variety and test plot location were detected.


A Movement West, Robert Katz Jan 1960

A Movement West, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

I did not discover that I had any interest in teaching or in academic life until late in my twenties, and then only through a sequence of unrelated circumstances.
I was born in 1917. My parents were Russian-Jewish immigrants who came to New York City at about the turn of the century.
At sixteen I enrolled in Brooklyn College, a recently organized, tuition-free, municipal college, then housed in rented office buildings in downtown Brooklyn. It took an hour to get to or from school on the subway. I managed to choose this inconvenient location because this school seemed most likely …


Yakir Aharonov Dissertation, Yakir Aharonov Jan 1960

Yakir Aharonov Dissertation, Yakir Aharonov

Faculty Collections

Yakir Aharonov's Dissertation entitled "Some Problems in the Quantum Theory of Measurements."


Two Proposed Experiments For The Detection Of The Dirac Monopole, Robert Katz, Darrell R. Parnell Oct 1959

Two Proposed Experiments For The Detection Of The Dirac Monopole, Robert Katz, Darrell R. Parnell

Robert Katz Publications

A magnetic monopole may be detected by its deflection in an electric field or by the character of the ionization it produces. The electric deflection experiment may be performed in a helium bubble chamber where helical (or spiral) tracks whose axes are parallel to the D-lines would be certain evidence for the discovery of the monopole. Previous studies of the ionization have emphasized that the Bragg tail would be missing from a monopole track, as compared to a charged particle. This conclusion must be modified because of the thin-down of tracks of heavy nuclei. The tracks of heavy nuclei …


A New Grain Hardness Tester, Robert Katz, A. B. Cardwell, N. D. Collins, A. D. Hostetter Sep 1959

A New Grain Hardness Tester, Robert Katz, A. B. Cardwell, N. D. Collins, A. D. Hostetter

Robert Katz Publications

A hardness tester, especially adapted for grain, was constructed by modifying a commercial portable soft metal tester known as the Barcol Impressor. A preloaded stylus is forced into grain sections prepared by means of a microtome. The displacement of the stylus, measured by a dial micrometer, is used as a hardness index. This has been related to the Vickers diamond pyramid hardness which is a standard metallurgical test. A number of hardness measurements may be made on a single transverse kernel section. The tester may be used for all wheat varieties. Significant variations in hardness within a single wheat kernel …


Effect Of Change In Moment Of Inertia On Line Intensities Of Parallel Vibration-Rotation Bands Of Symmetric Top Molecules, Gordon A. Gallup, J.L. Koenig Aug 1959

Effect Of Change In Moment Of Inertia On Line Intensities Of Parallel Vibration-Rotation Bands Of Symmetric Top Molecules, Gordon A. Gallup, J.L. Koenig

Gordon Gallup Publications

Effect of Change in Moment of Inertia on Line Intensities of Parallel Vibration-Rotation Bands of Symmetric Top Molecules


Ua3/3/1 Proposed National Science Foundation Summer Institute, Ward Sumpter, Wku President's Office Jan 1959

Ua3/3/1 Proposed National Science Foundation Summer Institute, Ward Sumpter, Wku President's Office

WKU Archives Records

Proposal for National Science Foundation summer institute to be held at WKU during the summer of 1959.


Structure Of Ch2, Gordon A. Gallup Jun 1958

Structure Of Ch2, Gordon A. Gallup

Gordon Gallup Publications

Gray has criticized the calculation of the ground state multiplicity of the CH2 fragment by the author. In answer, I would like to make two comments.
1. Regardless of the energies of ionization of a carbon atom, CH2 may be considered as a system composed of two protons, a carbon kernel, and four electrons. The proper amount of configuration interaction should arise naturally and depend on relative energies of orbitals and overlap values. It appears that there is too much configuration interaction in the calculation in reference since the equilibrium angle arrived at is 160° instead of 140° …


5. Newton, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold A. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart Jan 1958

5. Newton, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold A. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart

Section VIII: The Development of Modern Science

Isaac Newton (1642-1727) was born and educated in England. He attended Trinity College, Cambridge, and there found the inspiration for his prodigious work that was to synthesize and extend the labors of Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and others beyond the wildest dreams of any of them. Newton was the intellectual giant who set the direction of the physical sciences on the paths they were to follow undeviatingly into the twentieth century. [excerpt]


Xx. Meaning In The Physical Sciences, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold L. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart Jan 1958

Xx. Meaning In The Physical Sciences, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold L. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart

Section XX: Meaning in the Physical Sciences

The twentieth century has seen two major revolutions in our theories of physics concerning nature, and these have made us change many of our concepts about the terms in which nature can be described. The new theories born in these revolutions are the theory of relativity and of quantum mechanics. The biological sciences had their revolutions in the nineteenth century, and while remarkable progress has been made since, nothing comparable to that upheaval has occurred in this century. Of the two massive changes in the concepts of the physical sciences, we can discuss but one here. [excerpt]


1. The Problem, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold L. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart Jan 1958

1. The Problem, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold L. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart

Section XX: Meaning in the Physical Sciences

Newton's laws of motion and their associated definitions encountered their first difficulty near the middle of the nineteenth century.

Newton had designed his theory to describe the behavior of matter in space and time by inventing a relationship between the force on a body and the resulting change in motion of the body. Such a description of nature came to be called mechanical, and a large part of physicists' efforts were directed toward reducing all aspects of physics to mechanics. These efforts were rewarded magnificently in the fields of heat, electricity, and sound, in addition to astronomy and other more …


2. The Theory Of Special Relativity, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold L. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart Jan 1958

2. The Theory Of Special Relativity, Robert L. Bloom, Basil L. Crapster, Harold L. Dunkelberger, Charles H. Glatfelter, Richard T. Mara, Norman E. Richardson, W. Richard Schubart

Section XX: Meaning in the Physical Sciences

Albert Einstein (1879-1955) published his first work on relativity in 1905, the same year in which he published remarkable papers on Brownian motion and the photoelectric effect. At the time he did this work, he was a patent examiner in the Swiss Patent Office. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1921 "for his services to the theory of physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect." He became a professor of physics at several German universities, and in 1916, he took a position at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin.

As the …


Physics, Contents, Henry Semat, Robert Katz Jan 1958

Physics, Contents, Henry Semat, Robert Katz

Robert Katz Publications

Table of contents