Harrison M. Randall: Difference between revisions

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"Metrology" was the proper term. It was not a misspelling of "meteorology." ~~~~
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Prior to 1910, the Michigan Physics Department had been focused on precision [[metrology]]. Dr. Randall, who took all of his degrees at Michigan, also initially specialized in metrology. In 1902, he wrote his PhD thesis on his work measuring the [[thermal expansion|coefficient of expansion]] of quartz. But during his 1910-11 sabbatical year in [[Tübingen]], [[Germany]] he met [[Friedrich Paschen]], and became an expert in performing [[infrared spectroscopy]]. Randall then introduced these techniques to the University of Michigan.
 
It was not long before Randall and his Michigan collaborators produced molecular spectra of unprecedented quality and detail. At that time Walter Colby was the only resident theorist, so, with Randall’s encouragement, Colby recruited [[Oskar Klein]]. Although Klein returned to Europe after two years, the importance of theoretical colleagues was firmly established. Subsequently, the University of Michigan added [[Otto Laporte]], [[Samuel Goudsmit]], [[George Uhlenbeck]], and David Dennison to the physics faculty. Drs. Colby and Randall also started the Michigan Summer Symposia in Theoretical Physics, an annual, multi-week gathering that occurred from 1927 to 1941. This [[Academic conference|conference]] provided short courses from prominent theorists, including [[Niels Bohr|Bohr]], [[Paul Dirac|Dirac]], [[Fermi]], [[Werner Heisenberg|Heisenberg]], [[Wolfgang Pauli|Pauli]] and others, to audiences that sometimes exceeded 100.
 
Meanwhile, Randall also oversaw Michigan’s substantial growth in atomic physics and nuclear physics. In the mid 1930s he secured the funding to build what was then the world's most energetic [[cyclotron]].