Robert W. Wood

Wood's patents and theoretical work inform modern understanding of the physics of ultraviolet light, and made possible myriad uses of UV fluorescence which became popular after World War I.However, he decided to study optics instead when he witnessed a rare glowing aurora one night and believed the effect to be caused by "invisible rays".In his pursuit to find these "invisible rays", Wood studied and earned several degrees in physics from Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[citation needed] As a student at Harvard he swallowed marijuana as part of a self experiment, recorded the hallucinations he experienced in a report for a course of psychology.[6][7] In early 1900 he visited the United Kingdom giving a lecture at the Society of Arts in London on the diffraction process of photography in colours.[15] In 1909, Wood constructed the first practical liquid mirror astronomical telescope, by spinning mercury to form a paraboloidal shape, and investigated its benefits and limitations.[11] His investigations into the "Candy-Box Murder", a 1930 bombing that killed 18-year Naomi Hall Brady and two of her siblings at her home in Seat Pleasant, Maryland, helped convict her brother-in-law Leroy of manslaughter.[11][17] The bizarre death of 51-year-old socialite Katherine Briscoe at her Baltimore home in 1934 from a carelessly discarded blasting cap and his experiments derived therefrom would lead to the first scientific publication on explosively formed penetrators in the Proceedings of the Royal Society in 1936.[22] She was his "constant companion for more than 60 years, although she herself had no interest in scientific things" , in Baltimore, at their summer place near Easthampton on Long Island, and during their travels abroad.While in Langevin's lab, he observed that high-powered ultrasonic waves can cause the formation of air bubbles in water, and that fish would be killed or an experimenter's hand would suffer searing pain if placed in the path of an intense sound beam.When attempting to take the temperature of the mound of erupting oil with a glass thermometer, Wood and Loomis accidentally discovered another set of effects.Even if very fine thread of glass only 0.2 millimetres (0.01 in) in diameter and 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) long was put in the oil at one end, holding a bulge in the glass at the other end still resulted in a groove being left in the skin and the skin being seared, with painful and bloody blisters forming that lasted several weeks, showing that the transmitted ultrasound vibrations generated were quite powerful.[25] Wood and Loomis also investigated the formation of emulsions and fogs, crystallization and nucleation, chemical reactions, interference patterns, and standing waves in solids and liquids under high-intensity ultrasound.
The Clover and the Plover , illustration and verse from How to Tell the Birds from the Flowers (1907). See nature fakers controversy .
Photographs of sound waves (generated by sparks) and their reflections
Sketches of wavefronts observed from photographs
ConcordAmityvilleRoxbury Latin SchoolHarvard UniversityMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyUniversity of ChicagoCapillary waveFisheye lensGradient-index opticsWood's glassWood's lampJohn Scott MedalForMemRSMatteucci MedalFrederic Ives MedalRumford MedalHenry Draper MedalPhysicsopticsinfraredultraviolet photographyultraviolet lightWorld War IspectroscopyphosphorescencediffractionConcord, MassachusettsHawaiian IslandsThe Roxbury Latin SchoolauroraBerlin UniversityHeinrich RubensUniversity of WisconsinCloverPlovernature fakers controversyHenry Augustus RowlandJohns Hopkins UniversityAlfred Lee LoomisTuxedo Park, New Yorksurface plasmon polaritonfilterblack lightsfluorescencesurrealN-raysProsper-René BlondlotX-raysNaturealbedoAristarchus plateausulfurliquid mirrormercuryparaboloidalelectromagnetic radiationvisible spectrumphotographic emulsionsultravioletWall Street bombingSeat Pleasant, MarylandBaltimoreblasting capexplosively formed penetratorsProceedings of the Royal SocietyThe Man Who Rocked the EarthArthur TrainWilliam Northey HooperMassachusetts Supreme CourtAmityville, New Yorkultrasoundsingle wavefrontAugust ToeplerPaul Langevinsubmarinesultrasonic wavesformation of air bubbles in wateroscillatorquartztransducerwoodchipsice cubetherapeutic ultrasoundemulsionscrystallizationnucleationchemical reactionsinterference patternsstanding wavesRoyal SocietyNational Academy of Sciencesastrophysicsfar sideClark UniversityUniversity of BirminghamEdinburgh UniversityKonigliche Akademie der WissenschaftenAccademia dei LinceiRussian Academy of ScienceAmerican National Academy of ScienceAmerican Academy of Arts and SciencesAmerican Philosophical SocietyPhysical SocietyRoyal InstitutionPhysical Society of LondonRoyal Swedish AcademyIndian Association for the Cultivation of ScienceFranklin InstituteCity of PhiladelphiaOptical Society of AmericaAmerican Physical SocietyR. W. Wood PrizeBiographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal SocietyConant, JennetBibcodeJournal of the Royal Astronomical Society of CanadaProQuestSeabrook, W.American ExperienceWikisourceProject GutenbergInternet ArchiveLibriVoxInternet Speculative Fiction DatabasePresidents of the American Physical SocietyAlbert A. MichelsonArthur Gordon WebsterCarl BarusEdward Leamington NicholsHenry CrewWilliam Francis MagieBenjamin Osgood PeirceErnest MerrittRobert Andrews MillikanHenry A. BumsteadJoseph Sweetman AmesTheodore LymanThomas Corwin MendenhallDayton MillerKarl Taylor ComptonHenry GaleWilliam Francis Gray SwannPaul D. FooteArthur ComptonFloyd K. RichtmyerHarrison M. RandallLyman James BriggsJohn Torrence Tate Sr.John ZelenyGeorge B. PegramGeorge StewartPercy Williams BridgmanAlbert W. HullArthur Jeffrey DempsterHarvey FletcherEdward CondonLee Alvin DuBridgeJ. Robert OppenheimerFrancis Wheeler LoomisIsidor Isaac RabiCharles Christian LauritsenJohn Hasbrouck Van VleckEnrico FermiH. BetheRaymond Thayer BirgeE. WignerHenry DeWolf SmythJesse BeamsGeorge UhlenbeckVictor WeisskopfFrederick SeitzWilliam V. HoustonJohn Harry WilliamsRobert BacherFelix BlochJohn Archibald WheelerCharles H. TownesJohn BardeenLuis Walter AlvarezEdward Mills PurcellRobert SerberPhilip M. MorseJoseph Edward MayerPief PanofskyChien-Shiung WuWilliam A. FowlerGeorge PakeNorman Foster Ramsey Jr.Lewis M. BranscombHerman FeshbachArthur Leonard SchawlowMaurice GoldhaberRobert MarshakMildred DresselhausRobert R. WilsonSidney DrellVal Logsdon FitchJames A. KrumhanslEugen MerzbacherNicolaas BloembergenErnest M. HenleyDonald N. LangenbergBurton RichterC. Kumar PatelJ.R. SchriefferD. Allan BromleyAndrew SesslerJerome Isaac FriedmanJames S. LangerGeorge TrillingWilliam F. BrinkmanMyriam SarachikHelen QuinnMarvin L. CohenJohn HopfieldLeo KadanoffArthur BienenstockCherry A. MurrayCurtis CallanBarry BarishRobert L. ByerMichael S. TurnerMalcolm R. BeasleySam AronsonHomer NealLaura GreeneRoger FalconeDavid GrossPhilip H. BucksbaumSylvester James Gates Jr.Frances HellmanRobert Rosner