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Like the identification nearly a year ago of the antiproton (TIME, Oct. 31), the work was done with the Berkeley Bevatron, the world's most powerful particle accelerator, and a long train of auxiliary apparatus. The Bevatron's beam of 6.2 billion-volt protons was shot into a beryllium target. Out of the target came a secondary beam of assorted atomic debris. The particles with a negative charge, separated from the rest by the Bevatron's strong magnetic field, were mostly mesons. Among them were a few antiprotons (negative protons) formed when the Bevatron's powerful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: The Filled-Out Universe | 9/24/1956 | See Source »

...this action was predicted by theory. The Berkeley scientists, by carefully screening out of the beam all antiprotons and gamma rays, proved that it actually happens. The surviving mesons, neutrons and anti-neutrons were allowed to pass into a counting device which measures flashes of energy released by each entering particle. The ordinary neutrons gave small flashes. The mesons gave flashes about twice as strong. Occasional flashes 20 times as strong (2 billion volts) could be only the result of the mutual annihilation of a neutron and an antineutron...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: The Filled-Out Universe | 9/24/1956 | See Source »

...instrument landing, flight direction, automatic piloting, weather radar. His equipment operates along the U.S.'s and Canada's far northern Distant Early Warning (DEW) line. His young company, which grew from a gross of $722,000 in 1940 to $123 million in fiscal 1956, has bounced radio beams off the moon, shot a high-frequency TV beam 800 miles around the curvature of the earth to bring man closer to the goal of transoceanic television (TIME, May 19, 1952), developed a wingless aircraft, the "Aerodyne" (TIME, Jan. 9), and is now working on highly secret missile-guidance systems...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: Genius at Work | 9/24/1956 | See Source »

...Flat Near Zagreb. Somehow, the 18-ft. 3-in. Half Safe, with her waddling 5-ft. 3-in. beam, survived an Atlantic hurricane. When he got to England, after the first leg of his journey, Skipper Carlin spent three years writing about his early adventures (Half Safe, William Morrow & Co., Inc. $5) and refitting his ship. He lengthened her sloping superstructure fore and aft, thickened her neoprene waterproofing, beefed up her fuel capacity. Interior steel fittings were replaced with aluminum and plastic until the craft was 600 Ibs. lighter. All told, the Half Safe weighed 3½ tons with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Montreal-Tokyo By Jeep | 8/27/1956 | See Source »

Last week Publishers Simon & Schuster were beaming over the page proofs of Newman's latest work that will be published next month. The World of Mathematics is a massive, four-volume anthology of the best writing in the field, from the time man started to figure on papyrus to the automatons that can replace man. The editors have reason to beam. The anthology is already a runaway bestseller-an astounding fact, since publishers traditionally expect prestige rather than profits from first-rate scientific books. Prodded by a $100,000 advertising campaign, the public has almost bought out the first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Forbidding Land | 8/20/1956 | See Source »

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