Thomas Hope Johnson
American physicist
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Physics
Thomas Hope Johnson's Degrees
- Bachelors Physics Princeton University
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Thomas Hope Johnson was an American physicist, known for his research on cosmic rays. He was elected in 1930 a fellow of the American Physical Society. Biography Johnson graduated in 1920 with a bachelor's degree in mathematics and economics from Amherst College. From 1920 to 1921 he was a graduate student and instructor in mathematics at the University of Maine. During the summers of 1922 and 1923 he studied at the University of Chicago. From 1922 to 1923 he taught at Moses Brown School. At Yale University he was from 1923 to 1924 an assistant in physics, from 1924 to 1925 a laboratory assistant in optics, and from 1926 to 1927 a Sterling research fellow. There he received his doctorate in physics in 1926.
Thomas Hope Johnson's Published Works
Published Works
- Physics of the krypton fluoride laser (1980) (77)
- Cosmic-Ray Intensity and Geomagnetic Effects (1938) (49)
- Inertial confinement fusion: Review and perspective (1984) (45)
- Lead Salt Detectors And Arrays PbS And PbSe (1983) (43)
- A comprehensive kinetic model of the electron-beam-excited xenon chloride laser (1989) (36)
- The Azimuthal Asymmetry of the Cosmic Radiation (1933) (30)
- GENERAL PHYSICS: Nuclear, Atomic, and Molecular (PACS 01-361 2315 Depolarization effects in the active remote sensing of random media (1980) (30)
- Coincidence counter studies of the corpuscular component of the cosmic radiation (1934) (28)
- The use of a thermionic tetrode for voltage control (1932) (27)
- Diffraction of Hydrogen Atoms (1931) (25)
- Progress of the Directional Survey of Cosmic-Ray Intensities and Its Application to the Analysis of the Primary Cosmic Radiation (1935) (23)
- Lead Selenide Detectors for Intermediate Temperature Operation (1965) (22)
- The Production and Measurement of Molecular Beams (21)
- A circuit for recording multiply-coincident discharges of geiger-mueller counters (1933) (18)
- Circuits for the Control of Geiger‐Mueller Counters and for Scaling and Recording Their Impulses (1938) (17)
- Photographic Record of First Order Diffraction of Hydrogen Atoms by a Lithium Fluoride Crystal (1930) (16)
- Evidence that protons are the primary particles of the hard component (1939) (14)
- Guiding-center simulation of toroidal plasmas☆ (1977) (14)
- The East-West Asymmetry of the Cosmic Radiation in High Latitudes and the Excess of Positive Mesotrons (1941) (13)
- On the variations of cosmic radiation during magnetic storms (1938) (12)
- Unidirectional Measurements of the Cosmic-Ray Latitude Effect (1937) (11)
- The East-West Symmetry of the Cosmic Radiation at Very High Elevations Near the Equator and Evidence that Protons Constitute the Primary Particles of the Hard Component (1939) (11)
- Lead Selenide Detectors for Ambient Temperature Operation (1965) (11)
- Comparison of the angular distributions of the cosmic radiation at elevations 6280 ft. and 620 ft. (1933) (11)
- The reflection of hydrogen atoms from lithium fluoride (1930) (10)
- Evidence for a Positron-Negatron Component of the Primary Cosmic Radiation (1935) (10)
- The intensity of the primary cosmic radiation and its energy distribution (1938) (7)
- Detector array technology (1965) (7)
- Intensities of Molecular Beams (1927) (7)
- Pressure Coefficient of Surface Tension and the Expansion Ratio of High Pressure Cloud Chambers (1947) (6)
- Preliminary Report of the Results of Angular Distribution Measurements of the Cosmic Radiation in Equatorial Latitudes (1933) (6)
- The cosmic-ray intensity at high elevations in northern latitudes (1938) (6)
- The Asymmetry of the Cosmic Radiation at Swarthmore (1933) (6)
- The reflection of hydrogen atoms from crystals (1928) (6)
- Coincidence Counter Studies of the Variation of Intensities of Cosmic-Ray Showers and Vertical Rays with Barometric Pressure (1935) (5)
- A Hydrostatically Supported Cloud Chamber of New Design for Operation at High Pressures (1943) (5)
- The Reflection of Hydrogen Atoms From Crystals of Lithium Fluoride (1930) (5)
- The Production of Multiple Secondaries in Lead by Cosmic Radiation (1932) (5)
- Vacuum tube characteristics in relation to the selection of coincident pulses from cosmic ray counters (1934) (5)
- Concerning the production of groups of secondaries by the cosmic radiation (1932) (4)
- The Difference in the Absorption of Cosmic Rays in Air and Water and the Instability of the Barytron (1939) (4)
- An improved radiobarograph (1939) (4)
- Radio-transmission of coincidence counter cosmic-ray measurements in the stratosphere (1937) (4)
- Review of Cosmic Rays (1950) (4)
- The cosmic ray hodoscope (1933) (4)
- The reflection of hydrogen atoms from crystals: Intensity measurements of the specularly reflected beam (1929) (3)
- Electron densities in xenon chloride laser mixtures (1988) (3)
- Cloud-chamber track of a decaying mesotron (1942) (3)
- Evidence for the secondary structure of lithium fluoride by atomic diffraction (1931) (3)
- North-South Asymmetry of the Cosmic Radiation in Mexico (1935) (3)
- Geiger-counter measurements in the upper atmosphere bearing upon the nature of the radiation from solar flares and radio fade-outs (1939) (3)
- Angular distribution of low energy cosmic radiation and interpretation of angular distribution curves (1933) (2)
- Cosmic rays-theory and experimentation (1932) (2)
- Cloud-chamber track of a mesotron stopped by gas (1942) (2)
- A note on the nature of the primary cosmic radiation (1938) (2)
- The Diffraction of Hydrogen Atoms by the Mosaic Structure of Crystals (1931) (2)
- The variation of the cosmic-ray intensity with azimuth (1932) (1)
- Absorption measurements of the cosmic radiation (1933) (1)
- Contribution of the cosmic radiation to the ionization of the upper atmosphere (1935) (1)
- Scaling of the electron‐beam‐pumped xenon chloride laser (1991) (1)
- The azimuthal asymmetry of the cosmic radiation in Mexico city (1933) (1)
- Direct Evidence of a Proton Component of the Cosmic Radiation (1940) (1)
- An Interpretation of Cosmic-Ray Phenomena (1932) (1)
- The contributions of showers to the coincidences recorded at high elevations (1940) (1)
- An interpretation of cosmic-ray phenomena☆ (1932) (1)
- The East-West Asymmetry of the Cosmic Radiation at Very High Elevations Near the Equator (1939) (1)
- Failure Testing: A Proposal for Increasing Confidence in the Results of Numerical Simulations (1976) (1)
- The relative stopping powers of carbon and lead for slow mesons (1941) (1)
- Scaling of the xenon chloride laser (1989) (0)
- Coincidence counter studies of the variation of intensities of cosmic ray showers and vertical rays with barometric pressure (1935) (0)
- The angular dispersion of the cosmic radiation in the upper atmosphere resulting from deflections of low energy particles in the earth's magnetic field (1939) (0)
- Physics in the atomic energy program (1952) (0)
- Cosmic radiation : fifteen lectures (1946) (0)
- Unidirectional cosmic‐ray intensities and their variation with latitude (1936) (0)
- On the Mechanism of Orientation of Atoms in Magnetic and Electric Fields (1928) (0)
- AEC research program and policy (1954) (0)
- The Reflection of Atomic Hydrogen from Ice Crystals (1927) (0)
- A Calculation Concerning the Nature of the Secondary Corpuscular Cosmic Radiation (1932) (0)
- Unidirectional cosmic-ray intensities and their variation with latitude (1937) (0)
- Correlation of cosmic-ray geomagnetic effects (1938) (0)
- New evidence regarding the nature of the primary cosmic radiation (1939) (0)
- Computational studies of the two-component toroidal fusion test reactor (1974) (0)
- Recent advances in the investigation of cosmic rays (1940) (0)
- Earth-magnetic analysis of the primary cosmic radiation (1935) (0)
- The AEC's physics research program (1953) (0)
- The nature of the cosmic radiation : being a lecture delivered at the Administration building of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, March 12, 1935 (1935) (0)
- The geomagnetic effects and their bearing upon the fundamental problems of the cosmic ray investigation (1939) (0)
- The azimuthal asymmetry of the cosmic radiation at swarthmore (1933) (0)
- Circuits for the control of Geiger-Mueller counters and for scaling and recording their impulses (1939) (0)
- The reflection of hydrogen atoms from crystals: Velocity selection in the specular beam (1929) (0)
- Radio balloon‐measurements of the cosmic radiation (1937) (0)
- Present status of the theory of the effect of the Earth's magnetic field on cosmic rays by M. S. Vallarta, Sc.D., Ph.D. (1939) (0)
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