Alice Armstrong

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Alice H. Armstrong was an American physicist known for her work at the National Bureau of Standards certifying the United States' radium supply. She was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1931.[1]

Early life and education[]

Armstrong grew up in Waltham, Massachusetts and attended a two-room country schoolhouse until she entered Waltham High School, where she studied Latin, German and French. Her mother hoped that she would attend Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, but she chose Wellesley College instead after visiting there with a friend. At Wellesley, she originally intended to major in French and German, but she took a physics course on the advice of her older half-brother, an engineer, and she went on to earn a degree in physics with a minor in chemistry.[2] Armstrong graduated from Wellesley in 1919.[3]

Career[]

Armstrong developed an interest in radioactivity during her time at Wellesley, and after graduating, she took a job at the National Bureau of Standards. The Bureau's radium laboratory had the responsibility of checking the quality and amount of radium samples, and the lab director was frequently absent due to a stomach ulcer. "So," Armstrong later recalled, "after only a few months, I found myself more or less in charge of certifying all the radium sold in the United States."[2] After three years at the Bureau of Standards, Armstrong went to Radcliffe College for graduate studies, where she investigated X-ray spectroscopy with William Duane.[4] During her graduate studies, she fell ill for half a year due to X-ray overexposure.[2] She worked as an instructor at Wellesley,[5] and then took an assistant position at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in 1927.[6]

In 1942, she held the office of secretary-treasurer for the New England section of the American Physical Society.[7]

She returned again to Wellesley and became a professor of physics, eventually leaving in 1953 to conduct research at Los Alamos.[8]

References[]

  1. ^ "APS Fellowship". American Physical Society. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
  2. ^ a b c "Alice Armstrong". Niels Bohr Library & Archives. American Institute of Physics. Retrieved 2020-06-08.
  3. ^ "'19 Alumna Works with Radium". Wellesley College News. 1922-01-26.
  4. ^ AAUW Journal. American Association of University Women. 1923.
  5. ^ "Report of the President : Wellesley College". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2020-08-13.
  6. ^ "Scientific Notes and News". Science. 66 (1696): 10–13. 1927. doi:10.1126/science.66.1696.10-a. ISSN 0036-8075. JSTOR 1651789.
  7. ^ Armstrong, Alice H. (June 1942). "New England Section". American Journal of Physics. 10 (3): 166. doi:10.1119/1.1990364. ISSN 0002-9505.
  8. ^ Bulletin of Wellesley College: President's Report and Statistical Studies of the College. Wellesley College. 1954. p. 25.
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