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University of Sydney School of Physics

The School of Physics is a constituent body of the Faculty of Science at the University of Sydney, Australia.

School of Physics
TypePublic
Head of SchoolTara Murphy
Location,
Australia

33°53′17″S 151°11′14″E / 33.888025°S 151.187134°E / -33.888025; 151.187134
AffiliationsUniversity of Sydney
Websitesydney.edu.au/science/physics

History edit

Physics was first taught at the tertiary level in Australia at the University of Sydney, beginning in 1852.[1][third-party source needed] {{citation needed span|After the establishment of the Faculty of Science in 1882, the School was established as a distinct entity within the Faculty.

Physics Department, the Makinsons and the "Bailey Boys" edit

Before being the School of Physics, it was simply the Physics Department.[2]

Condensed matter physicist Richard E. B. Makinson lectured at the department, although was never promoted to professor, because, according to Phillip Deery, of his Communist political views.[3] His wife Kathleen Rachel Makinson, who studied physics at the University of Cambridge before moving to Australia in 1939, worked at the Department during World War 2 as both Research Assistant and Research Scholar.[4] She helped with courses taught to the so-called "Bailey Boys", which were courses in radar techniques and electronics given by the Department to (mainly) RAAF personnel, and worked on classified wartime radar projects.[5] The name "Bailey Boys" came from professor V. A. Bailey at the department.[5]

The chairpersonship of the department was vacant from 1946 until 1952.[6] Although several people had been approached, including Bernard Lovell, no-one accepted the position.[6] Colin Keay, physics professor at the University of Newcastle and reviews editor of Australian Physics, characterized the department at that time as "run-down".[2] Professor M. L. Oliphant, who wrote to Lovell on 13 May 1947, told Lovell that physics in the university "has not been in the forefront for some time" and that "the place needs a man who is prepared to go into it in rather a bull-headed fashion and drive through the apathy which has gripped it".[6][7]

Foundation and heads of the School edit

From its founding in the 1950s until 1987, the first head of the School was Harry Messel, who was responsible for the creation of its original 14 permanent academic appointments.[8][9] Keay describes Messel as "a remarkable professor" who "in little more than a year" turned the Physics Department into "a world-class facility" and "broadened it into a diverse School of eventually eight Departments".[2] Messel overlooked some loyal employees including Phyllis Mary Nicol who he thought of as a coach rather than a lecturer.[10]

Early work in the School included cosmic ray and low temperature physics research by Dr Stuart Butler and Dr John Blatt. At Messel's instigation it was visited by mathematician J. E. Moyal.[9] Messel encouraged recognition of the School's benefactors by having Departments, Chairs, and Laboratories named after them.[11]

By 1960, the School had its own computing department,[12] and a computer named SILLIAC, one of only two computers in New South Wales.[13] Blatt had persuaded Messel that the department needed an electronic computer for theoretical work, and it had been paid for, in large part, by an A$50,000 (equivalent to $1,218,190 in 2022) donation, which was then doubled, from a Sydney jewellery store owner named Adolph Basser, his winnings from when his horse named Delta had won the 1951 Melbourne Cup.[14][15][16] Named after the donor, the Basser Laboratory in the School of Physics was later to become the Basser Department of Computer Science.[17]

The Chatterton Astronomy Department was named for donor Stanley Chatterton, co-founder of Woolworths, and built Sydney University's Stellar Interferometer (SUSI) at Narrabi Observatory in 1991 for A$2,950,000 (equivalent to $6,335,470 in 2022).[18][19]

The Falkiner Department of Nuclear Physics, later to become the Falkiner Department of High Energy Physics, was named for F. B. S. Falkiner, the father of George B. S. Falkiner, a property owner in Warren who donated A$52,000 (equivalent to $1,018,401 in 2022) in 1954 towards creating it.[20][21] Its first research appointment was Paul George from Imperial College London, and one of the department's early experiments conducted by Donald Millar and Henri Rathgeber was two underground cloud chambers in an abandoned gun emplacement in Sydney Harbour at South Head.[21]

Other Falkiner Department experiments included measuring Cerenkov radiation at what was then Badgery's Creek Farm, but was later to be the Fleurs Observatory, using a telescope, photomultiplier, and reflector, all mounted in a dustbin.[22]

Basser himself went on to be a foundation governor of the Nuclear Research Foundation,[23] and at Messel's instigation the university later awarded Basser, Falkiner, and Cecil Green honorary degress.[11]

Dr Anne Green, the third woman radio astronomer in Australia, was a professor at the School and its head in 2008.[24]

Mills edit

Australian radio astronomy pioneer Bernie Mills left CSIRO Radiophysics Lab (RPL) for the School in May 1960.[25][26] He had been recruited by Messell,[27] who offered him the opportunity to build a larger "SuperCross" version of his Mills Cross.[28][29] He was officially approved as a Reader at the School by the University Senate in June 1960, with a grant of A$100,000 (equivalent to $1,664,051 in 2022) and a further A$10,000 (equivalent to $166,405 in 2022) for running costs for a new radio astronomy department in the School.[30]

Other people edit

U.K. astronomer Richard Q. Twiss worked with Robert Hanbury Brown at the School in the 1960s, on the Narrabri Stellar Intensity Interferometer.[31]

Two prominent benefactors of the school in the 1980s were philanthropists Cecil and Ida Green, who endowed two Research Fellowships at the school, named after Messell, in 1980 and 1983.[32]

Rivalries edit

Various academic and institutional rivalries have existed over the years.

The School of Physics recorded telemetry from Sputnik 2, but wouldn't release the data to Russian researchers S. N. Vernov and A. E. Chudakov, leading them to miss the discovery of a radiation belt.[33] When asked about this in 1959, Messell said that this was in response to the Russians not giving them the codes to the telemetry data: "They would not send us the code and we were not about to send them the data".[33]

The departure of Mills for the School strained relationships between it and CSIRO RPL,[34] two institutions that were physically only a few hundred metres from each other;[30] although there was a large exodus of astronomers from RPL at the time, driven by funding cutbacks as research was concentrated upon the Parkes Radio Telescope and the Culgoora Radio Heliograph at the expense of smaller projects.[28] The RPL had already been suffering from internal schisms, and Joe Pawsey wrote a report for CSIRO in 1960 recognizing that things like Mills's proposed improved Cross could not have been funded by CSIRO because of funds being tied up by the GRT at Parkes.[35]

The affiliations listed for Cyril Hazard in his 1963 papers in Nature only served to increase the division between the two institutions.[36] Hazard was on staff at the School, but was listed solely as affiliated with the RPL, which the School took to be a dishonest academic snub.[36][37] The editors of Nature were blamed for this error, when they reformatted for publication what had been originally submitted as a letter into (as they believed it should be) a full article, moving the authorship from the end of the letter (the usual position for letters) to the head of the article (the usual position for articles) and losing Hazard's note in an acknowledgement at the end of the letter about being from "the Narrabri Observatory of the School of Physics of the University of Sydney" in doing so.[36][28] There was a correction in a subsequent edition, but CSIRO RPL did not distance itself from the mistake,[37] and on the original manuscript of the letter as submitted for publication, someone had in fact written "delete" next to Hazard's School of Physics address.[36]

References edit

  1. ^ USYDP.
  2. ^ a b c Keay 1988, p. 165.
  3. ^ Goss & McGee 2009, p. 203.
  4. ^ Goss & McGee 2009, pp. 201–202.
  5. ^ a b Goss & McGee 2009, p. 202.
  6. ^ a b c Robertson 1992, p. 214.
  7. ^ Saward 1984, p. 135.
  8. ^ Frater, Goss & Wendt 2017, p. 48.
  9. ^ a b Moyal 2006, pp. 55–56.
  10. ^ Annable, Rosemary, "Phyllis Mary Nicol (1903–1964)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2 January 2024
  11. ^ a b Haynes 1996, p. 293.
  12. ^ Shrock 1989, p. 280.
  13. ^ Patterson 2021, p. 84.
  14. ^ Haynes 1996, p. 294.
  15. ^ Glass 1998, p. 227.
  16. ^ Robertson 1992, p. 126.
  17. ^ Pearcey 1988, pp. 36, 105.
  18. ^ Haynes 1996, p. 316.
  19. ^ Graham et al. 2021.
  20. ^ USYDNRF 1954, p. 10.
  21. ^ a b Haynes 1996, p. 310.
  22. ^ Haynes 1996, p. 311.
  23. ^ Pearcey 1988, p. 105.
  24. ^ Goss & McGee 2009, p. 250.
  25. ^ Goss & McGee 2009, p. 260.
  26. ^ Goss, Hooker & Ekers 2023, pp. 461–462.
  27. ^ Frater, Goss & Wendt 2017, p. 55.
  28. ^ a b c Haynes 1996, p. 233.
  29. ^ Haynes 1996, p. 253.
  30. ^ a b Goss, Hooker & Ekers 2023, p. 462.
  31. ^ Frater, Goss & Wendt 2017, p. 181.
  32. ^ Shrock 1989, p. 282.
  33. ^ a b Lemaire 2012, p. 85.
  34. ^ Kellermann & Bouton 2023, p. 95.
  35. ^ Goss, Hooker & Ekers 2023, pp. 462–463.
  36. ^ a b c d Kellermann & Bouton 2023, p. 101.
  37. ^ a b Haynes 1996, p. 250.

Sources edit

  • Goss, W. Miller; McGee, Richard (2009). Under the Radar: The First Woman in Radio Astronomy: Ruby Payne-Scott. Astrophysics and Space Science Library. Vol. 363. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9783642031410.
  • Frater, Robert H.; Goss, W. Miller; Wendt, Harry W. (2017). Four Pillars of Radio Astronomy: Mills, Christiansen, Wild, Bracewell. Astronomers' Universe. Springer. ISBN 9783319655994.
  • Moyal, Ann (2006). Maverick Mathematician: The Life and Science of J.E. Moyal. ANU E Press. ISBN 9781920942595.
  • Haynes, Raymond (1996). Explorers of the Southern Sky: A History of Australian Astronomy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521365758.
  • Shrock, Robert Rakes (1989). Cecil and Ida Green: Philanthropists Extraordinary. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262192767.
  • Patterson, Andrew (2021). Reminiscences of a Queensland Engineer. Balboa Press. ISBN 9781982291488.
  • Lemaire, J. F. (2012). "From the Discovery of Radiation Belts to Space Weather Perspectives". In Daglis, I.A. (ed.). Space Storms and Space Weather Hazards. NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Vol. 38. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9789401009836.
  • Kellermann, Kenneth I.; Bouton, Ellen N. (2023). Star Noise: Discovering the Radio Universe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781009021012.
  • Goss, W. Miller; Hooker, Claire; Ekers, Ronald D. (2023). Joe Pawsey and the Founding of Australian Radio Astronomy: Early Discoveries, from the Sun to the Cosmos. Historical & Cultural Astronomy. Springer Nature. ISBN 9783031079160.
  • Robertson, Peter (1992). Beyond Southern Skies: Radio Astronomy and the Parkes Telescope. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521414081.
  • Keay, Colin (1988). "Review: The Messel era". The Australian Physicist. 25. Australian Institute of Physics: 165.
  • Saward, Dudley (1984). Bernard Lovell: A Biography. R. Hale. ISBN 9780709017455.
  • Glass, Robert L. (1998). In the Beginning: Personal Recollections of Software Pioneers. Perspectives. Vol. 4. Wiley. ISBN 9780818679995.
  • Pearcey, Trevor (1988). A History of Australian Computing. Chisholm Institute of Technology. ISBN 9780947186944.
  • Graham, Alister W.; Kenyon, Katherine H.; Bull, Lochlan J.; Lokuge Don, Visura C.; Kuhlmann, Kazuki (2021). "History of Astronomy in Australia: Big-Impact Astronomy from World War II until the Lunar Landing (1945–1969)". Galaxies. 9 (2): 24. arXiv:2104.00901. doi:10.3390/galaxies9020024.
  • Inaugural Proceedings of the Nuclear Research Foundation: University of Sydney, 12th March, 1954. University of Sydney Nuclear Research Foundation.
  • "School of Physics". University of Sydney.

Further reading edit

  • Deery, Phillip (January 2000). "Scientific Freedom and Post-War Politics: Australia, 1945–1955" (PDF). Historical Records of Australian Science. 13 (1): 1. doi:10.1071/HR0001310001.
  • Haynes, Roslynn D.; Haynes, Raymond F. (1993). "The hazards of publication". Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of Australia. 10: 355–356. doi:10.1017/S1323358000026035. S2CID 115465601.
  • Fielder-Gill, Walter; Benett, John; Davidson, James A.; Pollard, Alf; Porter, F. Hal; Slayter, Robert T. (1999). Macleod, Roy (ed.). "The 'Bailey Boys': The University of Sydney and the Training of Radar Officers". Historical Records of Australian Science. 12 (4): 469–477. doi:10.1071/HR9991240469.
  • Millar, D., ed. (3 December 1987). The Messel era: the story of the School of Physics and its Science Foundation within the University of Sydney (1952–1987). Sydney: Pergamon Press. ISBN 9780080344317.

External links edit

  • "Group portrait of half of the officers who successfully completed No 2 Radar Course". Australian War Memorial. P03943.001.

university, sydney, school, physics, school, physics, constituent, body, faculty, science, university, sydney, australia, school, physicstypepublichead, schooltara, murphylocationcamperdown, darlington, sydney, australia33, 888025, 187134, 888025, 187134affili. The School of Physics is a constituent body of the Faculty of Science at the University of Sydney Australia School of PhysicsTypePublicHead of SchoolTara MurphyLocationCamperdown Darlington Sydney Australia33 53 17 S 151 11 14 E 33 888025 S 151 187134 E 33 888025 151 187134AffiliationsUniversity of SydneyWebsitesydney edu au science physics Contents 1 History 1 1 Physics Department the Makinsons and the Bailey Boys 1 2 Foundation and heads of the School 1 3 Mills 1 4 Other people 1 5 Rivalries 2 References 2 1 Sources 3 Further reading 4 External linksHistory editPhysics was first taught at the tertiary level in Australia at the University of Sydney beginning in 1852 1 third party source needed citation needed span After the establishment of the Faculty of Science in 1882 the School was established as a distinct entity within the Faculty Physics Department the Makinsons and the Bailey Boys edit Before being the School of Physics it was simply the Physics Department 2 Condensed matter physicist Richard E B Makinson lectured at the department although was never promoted to professor because according to Phillip Deery of his Communist political views 3 His wife Kathleen Rachel Makinson who studied physics at the University of Cambridge before moving to Australia in 1939 worked at the Department during World War 2 as both Research Assistant and Research Scholar 4 She helped with courses taught to the so called Bailey Boys which were courses in radar techniques and electronics given by the Department to mainly RAAF personnel and worked on classified wartime radar projects 5 The name Bailey Boys came from professor V A Bailey at the department 5 The chairpersonship of the department was vacant from 1946 until 1952 6 Although several people had been approached including Bernard Lovell no one accepted the position 6 Colin Keay physics professor at the University of Newcastle and reviews editor of Australian Physics characterized the department at that time as run down 2 Professor M L Oliphant who wrote to Lovell on 13 May 1947 told Lovell that physics in the university has not been in the forefront for some time and that the place needs a man who is prepared to go into it in rather a bull headed fashion and drive through the apathy which has gripped it 6 7 Foundation and heads of the School edit From its founding in the 1950s until 1987 the first head of the School was Harry Messel who was responsible for the creation of its original 14 permanent academic appointments 8 9 Keay describes Messel as a remarkable professor who in little more than a year turned the Physics Department into a world class facility and broadened it into a diverse School of eventually eight Departments 2 Messel overlooked some loyal employees including Phyllis Mary Nicol who he thought of as a coach rather than a lecturer 10 Early work in the School included cosmic ray and low temperature physics research by Dr Stuart Butler and Dr John Blatt At Messel s instigation it was visited by mathematician J E Moyal 9 Messel encouraged recognition of the School s benefactors by having Departments Chairs and Laboratories named after them 11 By 1960 the School had its own computing department 12 and a computer named SILLIAC one of only two computers in New South Wales 13 Blatt had persuaded Messel that the department needed an electronic computer for theoretical work and it had been paid for in large part by an A 50 000 equivalent to 1 218 190 in 2022 donation which was then doubled from a Sydney jewellery store owner named Adolph Basser his winnings from when his horse named Delta had won the 1951 Melbourne Cup 14 15 16 Named after the donor the Basser Laboratory in the School of Physics was later to become the Basser Department of Computer Science 17 The Chatterton Astronomy Department was named for donor Stanley Chatterton co founder of Woolworths and built Sydney University s Stellar Interferometer SUSI at Narrabi Observatory in 1991 for A 2 950 000 equivalent to 6 335 470 in 2022 18 19 The Falkiner Department of Nuclear Physics later to become the Falkiner Department of High Energy Physics was named for F B S Falkiner the father of George B S Falkiner a property owner in Warren who donated A 52 000 equivalent to 1 018 401 in 2022 in 1954 towards creating it 20 21 Its first research appointment was Paul George from Imperial College London and one of the department s early experiments conducted by Donald Millar and Henri Rathgeber was two underground cloud chambers in an abandoned gun emplacement in Sydney Harbour at South Head 21 Other Falkiner Department experiments included measuring Cerenkov radiation at what was then Badgery s Creek Farm but was later to be the Fleurs Observatory using a telescope photomultiplier and reflector all mounted in a dustbin 22 Basser himself went on to be a foundation governor of the Nuclear Research Foundation 23 and at Messel s instigation the university later awarded Basser Falkiner and Cecil Green honorary degress 11 Dr Anne Green the third woman radio astronomer in Australia was a professor at the School and its head in 2008 24 Mills edit Australian radio astronomy pioneer Bernie Mills left CSIRO Radiophysics Lab RPL for the School in May 1960 25 26 He had been recruited by Messell 27 who offered him the opportunity to build a larger SuperCross version of his Mills Cross 28 29 He was officially approved as a Reader at the School by the University Senate in June 1960 with a grant of A 100 000 equivalent to 1 664 051 in 2022 and a further A 10 000 equivalent to 166 405 in 2022 for running costs for a new radio astronomy department in the School 30 Other people edit U K astronomer Richard Q Twiss worked with Robert Hanbury Brown at the School in the 1960s on the Narrabri Stellar Intensity Interferometer 31 Two prominent benefactors of the school in the 1980s were philanthropists Cecil and Ida Green who endowed two Research Fellowships at the school named after Messell in 1980 and 1983 32 Rivalries edit Various academic and institutional rivalries have existed over the years The School of Physics recorded telemetry from Sputnik 2 but wouldn t release the data to Russian researchers S N Vernov and A E Chudakov leading them to miss the discovery of a radiation belt 33 When asked about this in 1959 Messell said that this was in response to the Russians not giving them the codes to the telemetry data They would not send us the code and we were not about to send them the data 33 The departure of Mills for the School strained relationships between it and CSIRO RPL 34 two institutions that were physically only a few hundred metres from each other 30 although there was a large exodus of astronomers from RPL at the time driven by funding cutbacks as research was concentrated upon the Parkes Radio Telescope and the Culgoora Radio Heliograph at the expense of smaller projects 28 The RPL had already been suffering from internal schisms and Joe Pawsey wrote a report for CSIRO in 1960 recognizing that things like Mills s proposed improved Cross could not have been funded by CSIRO because of funds being tied up by the GRT at Parkes 35 The affiliations listed for Cyril Hazard in his 1963 papers in Nature only served to increase the division between the two institutions 36 Hazard was on staff at the School but was listed solely as affiliated with the RPL which the School took to be a dishonest academic snub 36 37 The editors of Nature were blamed for this error when they reformatted for publication what had been originally submitted as a letter into as they believed it should be a full article moving the authorship from the end of the letter the usual position for letters to the head of the article the usual position for articles and losing Hazard s note in an acknowledgement at the end of the letter about being from the Narrabri Observatory of the School of Physics of the University of Sydney in doing so 36 28 There was a correction in a subsequent edition but CSIRO RPL did not distance itself from the mistake 37 and on the original manuscript of the letter as submitted for publication someone had in fact written delete next to Hazard s School of Physics address 36 References edit USYDP a b c Keay 1988 p 165 Goss amp McGee 2009 p 203 Goss amp McGee 2009 pp 201 202 a b Goss amp McGee 2009 p 202 a b c Robertson 1992 p 214 Saward 1984 p 135 Frater Goss amp Wendt 2017 p 48 a b Moyal 2006 pp 55 56 Annable Rosemary Phyllis Mary Nicol 1903 1964 Australian Dictionary of Biography Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University retrieved 2 January 2024 a b Haynes 1996 p 293 Shrock 1989 p 280 Patterson 2021 p 84 Haynes 1996 p 294 Glass 1998 p 227 Robertson 1992 p 126 Pearcey 1988 pp 36 105 Haynes 1996 p 316 Graham et al 2021 USYDNRF 1954 p 10 a b Haynes 1996 p 310 Haynes 1996 p 311 Pearcey 1988 p 105 Goss amp McGee 2009 p 250 Goss amp McGee 2009 p 260 Goss Hooker amp Ekers 2023 pp 461 462 Frater Goss amp Wendt 2017 p 55 a b c Haynes 1996 p 233 Haynes 1996 p 253 a b Goss Hooker amp Ekers 2023 p 462 Frater Goss amp Wendt 2017 p 181 Shrock 1989 p 282 a b Lemaire 2012 p 85 Kellermann amp Bouton 2023 p 95 Goss Hooker amp Ekers 2023 pp 462 463 a b c d Kellermann amp Bouton 2023 p 101 a b Haynes 1996 p 250 Sources edit Goss W Miller McGee Richard 2009 Under the Radar The First Woman in Radio Astronomy Ruby Payne Scott Astrophysics and Space Science Library Vol 363 Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9783642031410 Frater Robert H Goss W Miller Wendt Harry W 2017 Four Pillars of Radio Astronomy Mills Christiansen Wild Bracewell Astronomers Universe Springer ISBN 9783319655994 Moyal Ann 2006 Maverick Mathematician The Life and Science of J E Moyal ANU E Press ISBN 9781920942595 Haynes Raymond 1996 Explorers of the Southern Sky A History of Australian Astronomy Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521365758 Shrock Robert Rakes 1989 Cecil and Ida Green Philanthropists Extraordinary MIT Press ISBN 9780262192767 Patterson Andrew 2021 Reminiscences of a Queensland Engineer Balboa Press ISBN 9781982291488 Lemaire J F 2012 From the Discovery of Radiation Belts to Space Weather Perspectives In Daglis I A ed Space Storms and Space Weather Hazards NATO Science Series II Mathematics Physics and Chemistry Vol 38 Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9789401009836 Kellermann Kenneth I Bouton Ellen N 2023 Star Noise Discovering the Radio Universe Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781009021012 Goss W Miller Hooker Claire Ekers Ronald D 2023 Joe Pawsey and the Founding of Australian Radio Astronomy Early Discoveries from the Sun to the Cosmos Historical amp Cultural Astronomy Springer Nature ISBN 9783031079160 Robertson Peter 1992 Beyond Southern Skies Radio Astronomy and the Parkes Telescope Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521414081 Keay Colin 1988 Review The Messel era The Australian Physicist 25 Australian Institute of Physics 165 Saward Dudley 1984 Bernard Lovell A Biography R Hale ISBN 9780709017455 Glass Robert L 1998 In the Beginning Personal Recollections of Software Pioneers Perspectives Vol 4 Wiley ISBN 9780818679995 Pearcey Trevor 1988 A History of Australian Computing Chisholm Institute of Technology ISBN 9780947186944 Graham Alister W Kenyon Katherine H Bull Lochlan J Lokuge Don Visura C Kuhlmann Kazuki 2021 History of Astronomy in Australia Big Impact Astronomy from World War II until the Lunar Landing 1945 1969 Galaxies 9 2 24 arXiv 2104 00901 doi 10 3390 galaxies9020024 Inaugural Proceedings of the Nuclear Research Foundation University of Sydney 12th March 1954 University of Sydney Nuclear Research Foundation School of Physics University of Sydney Further reading editDeery Phillip January 2000 Scientific Freedom and Post War Politics Australia 1945 1955 PDF Historical Records of Australian Science 13 1 1 doi 10 1071 HR0001310001 Haynes Roslynn D Haynes Raymond F 1993 The hazards of publication Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of Australia 10 355 356 doi 10 1017 S1323358000026035 S2CID 115465601 Fielder Gill Walter Benett John Davidson James A Pollard Alf Porter F Hal Slayter Robert T 1999 Macleod Roy ed The Bailey Boys The University of Sydney and the Training of Radar Officers Historical Records of Australian Science 12 4 469 477 doi 10 1071 HR9991240469 Millar D ed 3 December 1987 The Messel era the story of the School of Physics and its Science Foundation within the University of Sydney 1952 1987 Sydney Pergamon Press ISBN 9780080344317 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to School of Physics University of Sydney Group portrait of half of the officers who successfully completed No 2 Radar Course Australian War Memorial P03943 001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Sydney School of Physics amp oldid 1193463908, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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