14 research outputs found

    Introduction and Historical Review

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    Cultural change in science A case-study in high-energy physics 1967-1978

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:8318.1714(SSRC-RR--G/00/23/0013) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    X-Ray Observations of Cluster Mergers

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    X-ray observations have played a key role in the study of substructure and merging in galaxy clusters. I review the evidence for cluster substructure and mergers obtained from X-ray observations with satellites that operated before Chandra and XMM. Different techniques to study cluster mergers via X-ray imaging and spectral data are discussed with an emphasis on the quantitative analysis of cluster morphologies. I discuss the implications of measurements of cluster morphologies for cosmology and the origin of radio halos

    Radiophysics field stations and the early development of radio astronomy

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    During the period 1946–1961 Australia was one of the world’s leading nations in radio astronomy and played a key role in its development. Much of the research was carried out at a number of different field stations and associated remote sites situated in or near Sydney which were maintained by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation’s Division of Radiophysics. The best-known of these were Dover Heights, Dapto, Fleurs, Hornsby Valley and Potts Hill. At these and other field stations a succession of innovative radio telescopes was erected, and these were used by a band of young scientists—mainly men with engineering qualifications—to address a wide range of research issues, often with outstanding success
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