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When they analyzed the resulting readings, Kemp and Swedlund could scarcely believe their eyes. The figures indicated that the strength of the white dwarf's magnetic field was somewhere between 10 million and 30 million gauss (v. only about one-half gauss for the earth's and 100,000 gauss for the strongest fields detected around ordinary stars). Indeed, if a spaceship ever came within 1,000,000 miles of the star, it would be hopelessly stalled by its magnetic field. Still unconvinced, Kemp and Swedlund considered other factors-stray molecules in interstellar space, for example -that might...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: The Magnetic Dwarf in Draco | 9/14/1970 | See Source »

...Target the Red Guards overlooked: their atomic-weapon development facili ties and the work of foreign devils like Newton, Einstein, Faraday, Mendeleyev, Leibnitz, Gauss, Huygens, Kirchhoff. There, indeed, is a monument to the West that any sane man would like to see at the bottom of Lake Baikal. If they do a really thorough job long enough, they will be walking to work and working at night by the light of blazing pine knots, even in the Celestial City...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Sep. 23, 1966 | 9/23/1966 | See Source »

Walter J. Bate '39, Abbott Lawrence Lowell Professor of the Humanities, has won this year's Christian Gauss Award, for his book John Keats. Phi Beta Kappa presented the award to him at a dinner in Washington Friday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bate Receives Award From Phi Beta Kappa | 12/7/1964 | See Source »

Professor Bate's study of Keats won the Pulitizer Prize for Biography earlier this year. Another of his books, The Achievement of Samuel Johnson, won the Christian Gauss Prize...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bate Wins Faculty Prize for Book On Keats; Banfield, Wilson Honored | 5/29/1964 | See Source »

...Jahren. Gttingen's scientific star shone in the early 19th century under Astronomer Carl Gauss, one of the key founders of modern mathematical analysis and hence of modern physics. In the 1920s Physicists Max Born and James Franck taught on Gottingen's Bunsenstrasse. named after Alumnus Robert Bunsen, inventor of the burner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: Rebirth at Gottingen | 4/12/1963 | See Source »

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