A Century of Excellence in Measurements, Standards, and Technology
A Chronicle of Selected NBS/ NIST Publications
1901-2000
NIST Special Publication 958
David R. Lide, Editor
January 2001
U. S. Department of Commerce
Donald L. Evans, Secretary
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Karen H. Brown, Acting Director
In this volume, according to NIST policy, measurements are
expressed in SI units except in some cases where
reference is made to the conventional units used at the time
of the original publications.
Certain commercial equipment, instruments, or materials are
identified in this paper to foster understanding.
Such identification does not imply recommendation or
endorsement by the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, nor does it imply that the materials or equipment
identified are necessarily the best available for the
purpose.
Natl. Inst. Stand. Technol., Spec. Publ. 958, 395 pages (Jan.
2001) CODEN: NSPUE2
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government
Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402 9325 2
Foreword
As NIST celebrates its 100th birthday and we look back at
what has been accomplished,
the variety of NIST's contributions to science and technology
and to the economy of our
nation is truly remarkable. This book, which consists of
vignettes describing some of the
classic publications from our first century, can only sample
that variety. For every publi-cation
included, there were numerous others of comparable worth that
had to be left out.
Few if any of the world's technical institutions have had
such an eclectic, yet essential,
evolving mission from testing concrete and railroad
track scales to quasicrystals and
Nobel Prize-winning work on laser cooling of atoms; from
developing radio beacons for
aircraft navigation to building early computers for data
processing and developing sophis-ticated
models for the spread of fires. It is difficult to find any
area of science and
technology in which NIST/ NBS has not played some important
role.
The talented staff who work for NIST take pride in their
work. Communicating results
to the public is a critical task for us. While publication of
paper documents will undoubt-edly
be around for some time to come, electronic publication via
the World Wide Web is
already a key vehicle for NIST to distribute information
quickly. No doubt Internet-based
dissemination of our information will continue to grow in
importance.
Given the skill, enthusiasm, and dedication of our current
staff, I feel confident that this
splendid institution will produce an even greater
contribution to the United States during
the next hundred years. I am particularly proud to have had
the opportunity to be at the
helm of NIST as we transition into the 21st Century. And our
recent employee survey
shows that the vast majority of NIST people are equally proud
to work here.
Enjoy browsing this book. It is a tribute to the men and
women who have served NIST
with distinction since 1901.
Raymond G. Kammer, Director
December 2000
Centennial Publication Selection Committee
The following individuals served on the Committee that
developed the criteria for
selecting publications to be included in this volume. The
Committee solicited nominations,
selected the publications to be included from the
approximately 450 nominations that were
submitted, and coordinated the preparation of short accounts
of the chosen publications:
Brian Belanger, Director's Office (Chair)
Walter Leight,
Technology Services (Vice Chair)
Ronald Boisvert, Information Technology Laboratory
Susan
Makar, Office of Information Services
John Mayo-Wells, Electronics and Electrical Engineering
Laboratory
Ronald Munro, Materials Science and Engineering Laboratory
Dale Newbury, Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory
Hans J. Oser, Standards Alumni Association
Daniel Pierce, Physics Laboratory H. Steffen Peiser,
Standards Alumni Association
Dennis Swyt, Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory W. Reeves
Tilley, Standards Alumni Association
Richard Wright, Building and Fire Research Laboratory
Acknowledgments
Subcommittees Representing the Operating Units of NIST
Building and Fire Research Laboratory
Richard Wright, Chair
Jack Snell
James Hill
Andrew Fowell
Joel Zingeser
Harold Marshall
Karen Perry
Sivaraj Shyam-Sunder
Geoffrey Frohnsdorff
George Kelly
David Evans
Richard Gann
William Grosshandler
Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory
Dale E. Newbury, Chair
Charles M. Beck II
William R. Kelly
William J. Gadzuk
Roger D. Van Zee
Electronics and Electrical Engineering Laboratory
John Mayo-Wells, Chair
Norman B. Belecki
Jack Ekin
Douglas L. Franzen
Clark Hamilton
David A. Hill
Dave Rudman
Richard L. Steiner
W. Robert Thurber
Harry A. Schafft
Thomas R. Scott
Information Technology Laboratory
Ronald Boisvert, Chair
Martha Gray
John Cugini
M. Carroll Croarkin
Gordon Lyon
Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory
Dennis Swyt, Chair
Theodore Doiron
Donald Eitzen
Ernest Kent
Charles McLean
Materials Science and Engineering Laboratory
Ronald Munro, Chair
Norman Berk
Sam Coriell
Freddy Khoury
Physics Laboratory
Daniel T. Pierce, Chair
Charles W. Clark
Bert M. Coursey
James E. Faller
Albert C. Parr
Donald B. Sullivan
Wolfgang L. Wiese
Technology Services
Walter Leight, Chair
Charles Ehrlich
Ernest Garner
John Rumble
Charles Sturrock
Nancy Trahey
Standards Alumni Association
H. Steffen Peiser, Chair
John A. Bennett
Edith L. R. Corliss
Walter J. Hamer
John D. Hoffman
Ralph P. Hudson
Robert Kamper
Hans J. Oser
Jacob Rabinow
John A. Simpson
W. Reeves Tilley
List of Vignette Contributors
James S. Albus
Charles M. Beck II
Brian Belanger
N. B. Belecki
Norman F. Berk
Barry Bernstein
Stanley Block
Ronald F. Boisvert
Lewis M. Branscomb
Maureen Breitenberg
Carroll Brickencamp
E. A. Brown
Richard Bukowski
William E. Burr
John Cahn
Robert J. Celotta
Geraldine Cheok
Charles W. Clark
Sam Coriell
Bert Coursey
M. Carroll Croarkin
John Cugini
Tom Davis
Richard D. Deslattes
Ted Doiron
R. Dziuba
Charles Ehrlich
J. W. Ekin
Bruce R. Ellingwood
R. E. Elmquist
David Evans
James Faller
Fred Fickett
B. Fonoroff
D. L. Franzen
Stephen Freiman
Geoffrey Frohnsdorff
Edwin Fuller
J. W. Gadzuk
Ernest Garner
Saul Gass
Frank Gayle
Thomas E. Gills
Alan Goldman
Martha M. Gray
Daniel Gross
Walter J. Hamer
Carol Handwerker
Jonathan E. Hardis
Allan H. Harvey
Jim L. Heldenbrand
D. A. Hill
James E. Hill
John Hoffman
Ralph P. Hudson
A-M. Jeffrey
Vicky Lynn Karen
Takashi Kashiwagi
Elliot Kearsley
Sharon J. Kemmerer
Freddy Khoury
J. R. Kinard, Jr.
Russell A. Kirsch
Ralph Klein
Joan Koenig
Richard H. Kropschot
Robert D. Larrabee
James Lawrence
Walter G. Leight
Tom Lettieri
Johanna M. H. Levelt Sengers
Don Libes
David R. Lide
Richard M. Lindstrom
Daniel W. Lozier
William Luecke
John W. Lyons
Ted Madey
J. F. Mayo-Wells
Calvin S. McCamy
Howard McMurdie
James R. McNesby
Norman E. Mease
Alan D. Mighell
Michael R. Moldover
Raymond D. Mountain
Ronald Munro
Victor Nedzelnitsky
Harold Nelson
Dale E. Newbury
Anita O'Brien
Dianne P. O'Leary
Helen Ondik
Hans J. Oser
Albert C. Parr
H. Steffen Peiser
Daniel T. Pierce
Gasper Piermarini
Michael T. Postek
James E. Potzick
Thomas M. Proctor
Stanley Rasberry
Curt Reimann
A. G. Repjar
Ralph A. Richter
Steven Rolston
John R. Rumble, Jr.
Harry A. Schafft
F. Scire
Thomas R. Scott
Robert Sienkiewicz
Tom Siewert
Deborah Smyth
Richard N. Spivack
Kenneth D. Steckler
Donald B. Sullivan
Y. Tang
E. C. Teague
John Tesk
W. R. Thurber
W. Reeves Tilley
Terrell Vanderah
J. S. Villarrubia
George Walton
Wolfgang L. Wiese
E. R. Williams
William K. Wilson
Christoph Witzgall
Richard Wright
John Yates
R. D. Young
Robert R. Zarr
Joel P. Zingeser
Other Acknowledgments
In addition to the individuals listed above, several others
have played a key role in the preparation of this volume.
Particular thanks are due to Susan Makar for meticulous
checking of the bibliographic references; to Ilse Putman for
an excellent typesetting job; to Carolyn Stull for carefully
editing the final manuscripts; and to Kristy Thompson for
designing and maintaining the web site for the Centennial
Publications project.