Cryogenics in Oxfordshire

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dolch Words.
Advertisements

Getting your message across Ben Page Chairman Ipsos MORI Social Research Institute
Interviews Be Personable and Prepared. Job Interviews Getting an interview is the first sign of possible success in the job hiring process. It can cause.
THE NEW ECONOMY IN OXFORDSHIRE Changes of State Energy Levels & Molecular Vibration Superconductivity Preservation … So What ? Cryogenics : Classic Enabling.
Social Finance Fair – Big Society Capital 27 th February 2014 – Media City, Salford Sam Tarff Chief Executive Key Fund Investments Ltd
XEUS Technology Milli-Kelvin Refrigerator for the XEUS Cryogenic Detectors Adiabatic Demagnetisation Refrigerator I Hepburn Mullard Space Science Laboratory.
Neutrino Factory Workshop UK Magnet Manufacturing Capability Elwyn Baynham CCLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK Elwyn Baynham UKNF Oct 2003.
DIRECT SPEECH VERSUS REPORTED SPEECH. Form changes The above examples show some changes:  no inverted commas (‘...’) in reported speech, and no punctuation.
Sight Words.
Incandescent Light Bulb 3000K Sun 7000K Blue Giant Star 40,000K JET Fusion Experiment, Oxfordshire 100,000,000K.
High Frequency Words.
“Whether they ever find life there or not, I think Jupiter should be considered an enemy planet.” Jack Handy
Kapitsa was elected a member of the Royal Sociaty for his outstanding scientific work in the production of large magnetic fields. In the middle of.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
© KCL. WCED. PENTECH The falling Moon 1. Galileo Galilei ( ) lived in what we now call northern Italy. He was a professor of mathematics.
2007 年普通高等学校招生考试英语试题 听力部分 全国卷 I. 1. Who is coming for tea? A. John. B. Mark. C. Tracy. W: John, is Mark coming for tea tomorrow? M: Yes, I told you yesterday,
WORK AND EMPLOYMENT.
Meeting the Opportunity of “Big Data”: Lessons from Science Learning for Life Series October 1, 2014 Benjamin F. Jones Gordon and Llura Gund Family Professor.
Do Now Copy the HW: I’m giving back your projects 
ESSENTIAL WORDS.
Recommending sights. Guide for a famous sight
Visiting the doctor What medical advice might a doctor give you if you have an ear infection?
1 Complete the sentences with the words given.
Research Course 4, Session 2, Day One
Mario M. Bisi (1), Mark Gibbs (2), and Doug Biesecker (3)
“What support do parents want from Children’s Centres to enable them to feed their children a healthy diet?” Ileana Cahill Public Health Hampshire County.
Hello? Using the telephone
Meet Henry Hudson Hey, there! You’ve been hearing about all these great French explorers, but guess what? I’m not French! I sailed for the English.
Reported Speech Reported Statements
Researching Your Career Path
Paraphrasing Exercises
The Modal Verbs Ability – to be able to, can
AGCAS Cymru Wales Training & Development
13. What was Hitler’s “Final Solution?”
High-Frequency Phrases
Show children the theatre with the Victorian street scene backdrop
Kylee’s Career Path How to become an Editor.
Transform It!.
Small Talk & N-400 At the beginning of the interview, the officer might ask you first some simple “small talk” questions (about every day life) to be friendly.
Story: Here is August Landmesser
LIQUEFACTION OF AIR ADIABATIC DEMAGNETISATION.
World War II started when Germany entered Poland on September 1, 1939.
Fry Word Test First 300 words in 25 word groups
Mario M. Bisi (1), Mark Gibbs (2), and Doug Biesecker (3)
LIQUEFACTION OF AIR ADIABATIC DEMAGNETISATION.
Hi – I am Sarah and I live near Edinburgh in Scotland
Prática Oral em Língua Inglesa ll
Meet Henry Hudson Where and when was Hudson born? What country did he sail for? Write your answer on your “Background Information” fact card. Hey, there!
Founder of Intel - “Integrated Electronics”
British cartoon by David Low, 1934
TexPoint fonts used in EMF.
Safe at heart: HS2 Together
The Second One Hundred Sight Words
DETAILS OF JESUS’ BAPTISM FOUND IN? Matthew 3 and Luke 3
Being All Ears Listen and Decode Listen and Read Listen and Respond
The. the of and a to in is you that with.
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
A Virtuous Man Virtuous = Characterized by Moral Worth Right action and Thinking No ‘Superpowers’ Inspiration to All Men of Faith.
Sight Words.
Agile is more than writing user stories and burndown charts
Human Energy Systems Unit Activity 5.2 Carbon Emissions Jigsaw
Rental market in Oxfordshire
So different.
The Modal Verbs Ability – to be able to, can
Small Talk & N-400 At the beginning of the interview, the officer might ask you first some simple “small talk” questions (about every day life) to be friendly.
TIME & PLACE REFERENCES QUESTIONS BASIC REPORTING VERBS
FM2 Section A Planning Workshop
1. During the hard times of the great depression, Steven is discussion work with his boss. He is in for some bad news. 2. “As you well know Steve, times.
COMMON PHRASAL VERBS IN F.C.E.
Top Tips for successful revision Mrs Bellers
Presentation transcript:

Cryogenics in Oxfordshire Harry Jones*, Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford. Office, room number 166 Room 166, so? Isn’t that too much information? Well ……. In 1968, an apprehensive 23 year old (me) was taken into that office to be introduced to the great Professor Nicholas Kurti CBE FRS. *19 days into his 49th year in cryogenics and magnets 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11

In effect, we have to thank Adolf Hitler for cryogenics in Oxfordshire And Frederick Lindemann (later Lord Cherwell) Head of the Clarendon Laboratory. Anti Semitism in Germany in the 1930s was rife. This gave Lindemann the idea to offer refuge to top quality Jewish physicists especially those who worked in the area of low temperatures. The result: Franz (later Sir Francis) Simon, Kurt Mendelssohn, Heinrich Kuhn and ……... 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11

Nicholas Kurti who had been Simon’s student and post doc in Berlin and Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland). “ “ 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11

Low temperature work really took off in the Clarendon laboratory in the 1930s As did magnetic fields. We all know, now, that magnets need low temperatures – liquid helium etc, but these were the days before superconducting magnets (although Mendelssohn was writing to Nature suggesting superconducting PbBi wire magnets as long ago as 1933). Back then, it was the other way round. High magnetic fields were needed to get low temperatures, i.e., adiabatic demagnetisation of paramagnetic salts. Hence the famous 2 MW ex tramways generator that allowed fields up to 12.5 T in the Clarendon By 1956 Kurti achieved a millionth of a degree kelvin using nuclear demagnetisation and Parks Road Oxford was the coldest spot on earth. In 1960 Kurti repeated the experiment on live television (Tomorrow’s World) and the record stood for 18 years (see Guinness Book of Records!) 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11

The legacy of all this seeped into Oxfordshire – and elsewhere. Oxford Instruments, the university’s first spin out company was founded – See Audrey’s excellent book “Magnetic Venture” Another Clarendon Man, Jeremy Good (Mendelssohn’s student), founded a company called, Cryogenic Mendelssohn founded the journal “Cryogenics” in Oxford Yet another Clarendon man, Ralph Scurlock, founded the Institute of Cryogenics in Southampton Kurti was a co-founder of the British Cryogenics Council (its current chairman is a Clarendon man …..) John Cosier and Mike Glazer (both Clarendon men) founded Oxford Cryosystems (Long Hanborough) Heinz London proposed the 3He/4He dilution refrigerator at a conference in the Clarendon “The Harwell fridge” that was developed by OI. And, of course, Harwell, RAL (or NIRNS as was) and Culham (the famous Goodall chart) were all strong centres of cryogenics. Although, until 1974, they were in Berkshire NOT Oxfordshire. I’m sure there’s lots I’ve forgotten / didn’t know in the first place. You might call the above “direct impact”……………… 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11

This is not in chronological order How did things spread ? This is not in chronological order After OI, other “cryogenic” companies formed sometimes from OI Thor Cryogenics Magnex (ElScint) - Berensfield Technology Systems (brief but existed) - Witney AS Scientific – Abingdon OMT (Eynsham) morphed into Siemens Magnet Technology (SMT) Thames Cryogenics - Didcot Scientific Magnetics (previously Space Cryomagnetics) - Abingdon ICE Oxford Cryophysics - Witney As previously listed: Cryogenic1 and Cryosystems 1 Not in Oxfordshire 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11

And here we are today, in Oxfordshire with the Cryogenic Cluster So, Hitler and the Clarendon Laboratory have a lot to answer for. Lots of cryogenics over some 80 years (of the hundred or so years of LHe and superconductivity) not exclusively Oxfordshire of course but rather Oxford – centric. And here we are today, in Oxfordshire with the Cryogenic Cluster CRYOGENIC CLUSTER - The Most Powerful Concentration of Cryogenic Expertise on Earth and 12/11/2018 H. Jones Cluster Day 28-09-11