AIP’s Center for History of Physics Opens
New Web Exhibit on Ernest Rutherford, College Park, Md., Dec. 3, 2012 – The American Institute of Physics’ (AIP) Center for History of Physics has opened a new online exhibit on early 20th century physicist Ernest Rutherford, who helped discover the structure of the atom. Titled “Rutherford’s Nuclear World,” the new web exhibit burrows beneath the simple story of Rutherford’s famed discoveries and recreates the mystery and excitement of his world-changing work. The exhibit features audio clips and photographs and expands Rutherford’s story to include the scientist’s youth and education, his collaboration with other scientists, and his lasting influence. “The goal of this exhibit is to bring to life how Rutherford and his students made their discoveries, to peer over their shoulders as the work was being done,” said Greg Good, director of the Center for History of Physics. “The new exhibit, ‘Rutherford’s Nuclear World’, joins the dozen existing online exhibits of the Center for History of Physics. These range from exhibits on Einstein and Marie Curie, to the invention of the laser and the discovery of global warming,” noted Catherine O’Riordan, vice president of AIP’s Physics Resources Center. The Rutherford exhibit is also set to grow as new interactive features are added. Ernest Rutherford was born in 1871 in New Zealand. He made his career in England and is famous for his discovery of the atomic nucleus in 1911 and for the first artificial disintegration of the atom in 1919. Rutherford’s biographer and friend A.S. Eve wrote, “Rutherford
was the Newton of the atom, dealing with the disintegration and the building
of atoms. He was the king of the microcosm, leading an army to ever fresh
conquests.” The Center for History of Physics, established in 1965, strives to preserve and communicate the history of physics and allied fields. About the Center About AIP Contact:
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