Merle Tuve
#8,513
Most Influential Person Across History
American geophysicist
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Earth Sciences
Why Is Merle Tuve Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Merle Anthony Tuve was an American geophysicist who was the Chairman of the Office of Scientific Research and Development's Section T, which was created in August 1940. He was founding director of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, the main laboratory of Section T during the war from 1942 onward. He was a pioneer in the use of pulsed radio waves whose discoveries opened the way to the development of radar and nuclear energy.
Merle Tuve's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- A Test of the Existence of the Conducting Layer (1926) (244)
- Seismic Exploration of a Continental Crust (1955) (82)
- The Scattering of Protons by Protons (1936) (49)
- Crustal structure from seismic exploration (1954) (32)
- Neutron Yields from Artificial Sources (1937) (31)
- The Production and Focusing of Intense Positive Ion Beams (1935) (29)
- High Voltage Technique for Nuclear Physics Studies (1935) (26)
- Note on a radio method of estimating the height of the conducting layer (1925) (23)
- Note on the nature of a seismogram: II (1954) (21)
- Excitation-Curves for Fluorine and Lithium (1936) (17)
- Note on Kennelly‐Heaviside layer observations during a magnetic storm (1929) (16)
- Studies of deep crustal layers by explosive shots (1948) (14)
- Carbon Radioactivity and Other Resonance Transmutations by Protons (1935) (13)
- A New Experimental Method for Study of the Upper Atmosphere (1935) (13)
- VELOCITY STRUCTURES IN HYDROGEN PROFILES. (1972) (11)
- A Laboratory Method of Producing High Potentials (10)
- The Production and Application of High Voltages in the Laboratory (1928) (9)
- The Problem of Stellar Energy (1938) (9)
- Further Studies of the Kennelly-Heaviside Layer by the Echo-Method (1929) (8)
- The Scattering of Protons by Protons. III (1939) (8)
- The earth beneath the continents : a volume of geophysical studies in honor of Merle A. Tuve (1966) (8)
- The New Alchemy. (1940) (7)
- The Scattering of Neutrons by Protons (1936) (6)
- Artificial Radioactivity Using Carbon Targets (1934) (6)
- A Transmitter Modulating Device for the Study of the Kennelly-Heaviside Layer by the Echo Method (1928) (5)
- An Echo Interference Method for the Study of Radio Wave Paths (1929) (5)
- NUCLEAR-PHYSICS SYMPOSIUM A CORRECTION. (1934) (5)
- Early days of pulse radio at the Carnegie Institution (1974) (5)
- Disintegration-Experiments on Elements of Medium Atomic Number (1933) (4)
- Search by Deflection-Experiments for the Dirac Isolated Magnetic Pole (1933) (4)
- Atomic hydrogen survey near the galactic plane (1959) (4)
- THE FIFTH WASHINGTON CONFERENCE ON THEORETICAL PHYSICS. (1939) (4)
- Effective Heights of the Kennelly-Heaviside Layer in December, 1927 and January, 1928 (1928) (4)
- On the Technique and Design of Wilson Cloud‐Chambers (1933) (4)
- The atomic nucleus and high voltages (1933) (4)
- Greetings from the new editor (1949) (4)
- RESULTS OF PRELIMINARY TESTS OF CASCADED IMAGE CONVERTERS (1958) (3)
- Multiple Coincidences of Geiger-Müller Tube-Counters (1930) (3)
- DROPLET FISSION OF URANIUM AND THORIUM NUCLEI. (1939) (3)
- The Emission of Disintegration-Particles from Targets Bombarded by Protons and by Deuterium Ions at 1200 Kilovolts (1934) (3)
- THE SIXTH WASHINGTON CONFERENCE ON THEORETICAL PHYSICS. (1940) (3)
- Solid‐earth geophysics (1965) (2)
- The Application of High Potentials to Vacuum-Tubes (2)
- A high-resolution study of the outer parts of the Galaxy (1964) (2)
- Induced Radioactivity Using Carbon Targets (1935) (2)
- A Stable Hydrogen Isotope of Mass Three (1934) (2)
- The forces which govern the atomic nucleus (1938) (2)
- A Low-Power Positive-Ion Source of High Intensity (1934) (2)
- Technology and National Research Policy (1953) (2)
- Summary of the year's work, to June 30, 1947, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington (1947) (2)
- Hydrogen Motions in M31. (1963) (2)
- Let Us Pledge Not to Use H-Bomb First! (1950) (2)
- ASTRONOMICAL APPLICATIONS OF IMAGE INTENSIFIERS (1962) (1)
- Hydrogen motions in the central region of the Galaxy (1964) (1)
- The geophysical significance of radio measurements of the ionized layer (1932) (1)
- The Carbon Reactions and the Corrected Mass-Scale (1935) (1)
- William Joseph Rooney, 1890–1949 (1949) (1)
- Letter: An open forum (1968) (1)
- Introductory remarks. (1967) (0)
- Twenty‐Ninth Award of the William Bowie Medal, April 19, 1967 (1967) (0)
- N. A. S. Symposium on the Years of the Quiet Sun—IQSY: INTRODUCTORY REMARKS (1967) (0)
- Resonance Transmutations by Protons (1935) (0)
- The Editor's Final Note (1958) (0)
- Hydrogen Line Observations of M31 and M33 with the NRAO 300-ft Telescope. (1963) (0)
- Echo‐sounding of the Kennelly‐Heaviside layer (0)
- High-Speed Protons (1932) (0)
- Twenty‐First Award of the William Bowie Medal: Citation of Walter Maurice Elsasser (1958) (0)
- A Source for Resonance Radiation (0)
- On the use of a radioactive collector for potential‐gradient measurements (1927) (0)
- The energy acquired by a Dirac isolated magnetic pole in a magnetic field (1933) (0)
- Chapter 8 – Radio Ranging and Nuclear Physics at The Carnegie Institution (1970) (0)
- Twelfth Award of the William Bowie Medal (1950) (0)
- 21-cm Hydrogen Observations of the Central Region of the Galaxy. (1962) (0)
- Biological Effects of Gamma-Rays (1931) (0)
- High-Voltage Tubes (1930) (0)
- Velocity structures in hydrogen profiles;: A sky atlas of neutral hydrogen emission (1973) (0)
- A high resolution study of M31 (1964) (0)
- Hydrogen Line Observations of M33. (1963) (0)
- Note on the Production of Extremely High Voltages (1930) (0)
- Speed gains obtained with a cascaded image converter. (1959) (0)
- Development of Section T pattern of research organization. (1953) (0)
- Depth Dose Calculations for Super-voltage X-rays (1933) (0)
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