Carol G. Montgomery Explained
Carol Gray Montgomery (1909–1950) was an American physicist. Born in Denver, he earned a bachelor's degree from Caltech and a doctorate from Yale University.[1] At Yale, he helped build an early linear electron accelerator,[2] after which he moved to MIT in 1942, where he undertook war work at the Radiation Laboratory.[3] He wrote or co-authored three volumes of Radiation Laboratory technical publications.[4] He was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1938,[5] having been nominated by the Bartol Research Foundation where he and his collaborators conducted experimental work with coincidence counters.[6]
Selected publications
- Book: C. G. . Montgomery . R. H. . Dicke . Robert H. Dicke . E. M. . Purcell . Edward Mills Purcell . Principles of Microwave Circuits . MIT Radiation Laboratory Series . 8 . McGraw-Hill . New York . 1948.
- Book: Montgomery, C. G. . Technique of Microwave Measurements . MIT Radiation Laboratory Series . 11 . McGraw-Hill . New York . 1947.
- Book: L. D. . Smullin . Louis Smullin . C. G. . Montgomery . Microwave Duplexers . 14 . MIT Radiation Laboratory Series . McGraw-Hill . New York . 1948.
Notes and References
- March 1951. Carol Gray Montgomery. Physics Today. en. 4. 3. 30. 10.1063/1.3067183. 1951PhT.....4c..30.. 0031-9228.
- Web site: Beam Physics Lab . . 2020-08-23.
- Web site: Memorial Service for Yale Physics Professor To Be Held in the Fall . . 2000-06-09 . 2020-08-23.
- Web site: The MIT Rad Lab Series . November 2002 . 2020-08-23.
- Web site: APS Fellow Archive . . 2020-08-23.
- Web site: Particle Physics, 1935–1955 . . 2020-08-23.