Word: electronic
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Back in the 19305 when the nuclear era began, the building blocks of matter seemed simple enough. There were neutrons and protons nestled in the nucleus of the atom, electrons spinning around it, and photons to carry electromagnetic radiation. That seemed to be it. Then, after the big bomb-building breakthrough and the construction of billion-electron volt accelerators, scientists discovered a chaotic array of new particles. Some were so short-lived that their age was measured in less than a billionth of a second, their very existence inferred from the erratic tracks they left in bubble and cloud chambers...
...University has been engaged in bitter negotiations with the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) for almost a year to determine who will control the operation of the $12 million Cambridge Electron Accelerator (CEA). Although Harvard and the AEC will probably sign a contract within two weeks for $5 million a year to operate the accelerator, neither the Faculty nor the Administration is pleased with the final contract provisions...
...owns the land on which the CEA stands. And only Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are actually empowered to operate the facility. In all probability, the main reason the AEC backed down from its original rigid demands is that it feared the spectacle of a $12 million electron accelerator standing idle in Cambridge...
...unclassified, but unhappily, the present CEA contract has many loopholes which could permit the Federal government to tighten its controls over the accelerator at some future time. Wiggins stresses that if the AEC should ever attempt to impose intolerable controls, Harvard will stop operating the accelerator. But by then electron research could be so dependent on Federal funds that it may be almost impossible to turn down the yearly operating grant from...
...University clashed with the federal government last week over certain provisions in the contract to operate the Cambridge Electron Accelerator. Similar incidents at other colleges impelled the NSA Congress last summer to pass a resolution warning of the threat to universities' autonomy posed by heavy reliance on federal funds...