Orientation Mapping: 1987 MRS Fall Meeting Von Hippel Award Lecture
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in MRS Bulletin
- Vol. 13 (3) , 24-31
- https://doi.org/10.1557/s0883769400066112
Abstract
I must support the judgment of the Materials Research Society in naming its principal award after von Hippel. His early work was on dielectrics, and that is the area in which my own introduction to materials science was made. In fact, I habitually claim that one of the inventors and fathers of the subject was E.B. Moullin, Reader in Electrical Engineering at Oxford and later Professor of Electrical Engineering at Cambridge. In 1933 he approached my chemistry tutor, Sidgwick, saying “I have this man Willis Jackson coming to do a D.Phil, with me. He knows how to measure dielectric loss. I think that if I can put a physical chemist to work alongside him we might make that cease to be just an engineering parameter to be measured and come to know what causes it—and then perhaps design new materials which are better.” Sidgwick nominated me as the physical chemist, and as far as I am concerned that is where the subject of materials science begins.My subject is how you should display the statistics of orientations of polycrystals. For this subject I have several heroes from the past. They are Euler, of course, Rodrigues, Cayley and Klein. Of these the most unjustly neglected is Olinde Rodrigues, which is something I have only come to know in comparatively recent years. The whole subject is one to which I have returned on and off, learning a little more each time, since it was first put to me as a problem by C.G. Dunn just about 30 years ago.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Olinde Rodrigues' paper of 1840 on transformation groupsArchive for History of Exact Sciences, 1980
- A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies; with an Introduction to the Problem of Three Bodies. By E. T. Whittaker. Second Edition. Cambridge: University Press, 1917. Pp. xii, 432. Price 15s. net.The Mathematical Gazette, 1917