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Pugh, Emerson M.
Emerson Pugh papers, 1929-1970.
Correspondence; typescripts; manuscript; reprints. The correspondence (1929-1970, bulk dates 1929-1956) is on a variety of topics, including Pugh's research on the Hall effect, personal correspondence concerning military funding of scientific research, and letters and reviews referring to Pugh's Analysis of Physical Measurements (1967). The typescripts include Pugh's doctoral thesis (1929), "Instantaneous Mobilities in Electrical Fields of Particles Suspended in Fluids," and an operating manual (1942) for underwater metal location equipment. The manuscript (1949) is "The Invention of Explosively Forged Projectiles." The reprints (1932-1970) by Pugh and others concern magnetic effects in metals. Correspondents include: Richard Milton Bozorth, Dayton C. Miller, and John Torrence Tate.
Physicist, solid state physics (1896-1981). M.S., University of Pittsburgh, 1927; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1930. Physics faculty, Carnegie Institute of Technology (1920-1965), and acting head of department (1940-1942); consultant, Westinghouse Atomic Power (1956-1961). Research in ballistics, the Hall effect, and ferro-magnetism.
Bozorth, R. M. (Richard M.)
Miller, Dayton Clarence, 1866-1941
Tate, John T. (John Torrence), 1889-1950.
Colloids.
Diffusion.
Electricity.
Hall effect.
Magnetic materials.
Research -- Finance.
Physicists. lcsh
AIP-ICOS
American Institute of Physics. Niels Bohr Library & Archives. One Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740, USA
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