- Woodstock of physics
The term "Woodstock of physics" is often used by physicists to refer to the marathon session of the
American Physical Society ’s meeting onMarch 18 1987 , which featured 51 presentations concerning the science ofhigh-temperature superconductor s. The name is a reference to the legendary 1969Woodstock Music and Art Festival .Before a series of breakthroughs in the mid-1980s, most scientists believed that the extremely low temperature requirements of
superconductor s rendered them impractical for everyday use. However, by March 1987, a flurry of recent research onceramic superconductors had succeeded in creating ever-higher superconducting temperatures, including the discovery by theUniversity of Houston 's Paul Chu of a superconductor that operated at minus 139 degreesCelsius (minus 283 degreesFahrenheit ), above the temperature of boilingliquid nitrogen . The scientific community was abuzz with excitement.The Society added a last-minute session to their annual meeting to discuss the new research in superconductors. The session was scheduled to start at 7:30 PM in the Sutton ballroom of the New York Hilton hotel, but excited scientists started lining up at 5:30. Key researchers such as Chu and
Karl Alexander Müller (who would win the 1987Nobel Prize in Physics for his work in superconductors) were given 10 minutes to describe their research; other physicists were given five minutes. Nearly 2,000 scientists tried to squeeze into the ballroom. Those who could not find a seat filled the aisles or watched outside the room on television monitors. The session ended at 3:15 AM, but many lingered until dawn to discuss the presentations.The meeting caused a surge in mainstream media interest in superconductors, and laboratories around the world raced to pursue breakthroughs in the field. After a few years, however, research stalled, and press enthusiasm for superconductors died. On
March 5 ,2007 , many of the original participants reconvened inDenver for a 20-year anniversary.References
*Chang, Kenneth (
March 6 ,2007 ). " [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/06/science/06supe.html Physicists Remember When Superconductors Were Hot] ". "The New York Times ". Retrieved onMarch 7 ,2007 .
*Fishlock, David (April 3 ,1987 ). "A Ceramic Goldmine At The Electronics Frontier; Superconductivity". "The Financial Times ".
*Fishlock, David (March 17 ,1989 ). "Superconductivity Hits A Quieter Note Since The 'Woodstock Of Physics'". "The Financial Times ".
*Lemonick, Michael D. (May 11 ,1987 ). " [http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,964303,00.html Superconductors!] ". "TIME ". Retrieved onMarch 7 ,2007 .External links
* [http://www.aps.org American Physical Society home page]
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