The fly in the cathedral

how a small group of Cambridge scientists won the race to split the atom

308 pages

English language

Published May 28, 2004 by Viking.

ISBN:
978-0-374-53026-6
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OCLC Number:
64618787

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(1 review)

Amazon.com Review

If you want to understand how something works, you can dismantle it and study its pieces. But what if the thing you're curious about is too small to see, even with the most powerful microscope? Brian Cathcart's The Fly in the Cathedral tells the intriguing story of how scientists were able to take atoms apart to reveal the secrets of their structures. To keep the story gripping, Cathcart focuses on a time (1932, the annus mirabilis of British physics), a place (Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory), and a few main characters (Ernest Rutherford, the "father of nuclear physics," and his protégés, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton). Rutherford and his team knew that the long-accepted atomic model was held together by nothing more than trumped-up math and hope. They hoped to find out what held oppositely charged protons and electrons together, and what strange particles shared the nucleus with protons. In …

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Subjects

  • Rutherford, Ernest, -- 1871-1937
  • Cockcroft, John, -- Sir, -- 1897-1967
  • Walton, Ernest, -- 1903-1995
  • Cavendish Laboratory (Cambridge, England) -- History
  • Physics -- England -- Cambridge -- History
  • Physicists -- Great Britain -- Biography
  • Nuclear physics -- History