Professional Experience of  Jim & Rhoda Morris  Co-Owners of

Antiques of Science and Technology
 9 Morningside Rd. Wakefield, Ma. U.S.A.    781 245 2897    K1ugm@Comcast.net 

Summary of our professional experience
lots more details further on in the resume including list of papers and patents
Or click here to go to our primary web site Antiques of Science and Technology
About our personal life
#Examples Technical Papers,Talks,U.S. Patents, Movies and, Books
#Details and photos of some of the people and awards  we experienced
#Rhoda: Summary of Work Experience
#Jim: Basic Research 1955 to 1972

We are scientists that have had a lifelong passion for the sciences third only to our family and society. We have a combined experience of over 70 years at senior level participation in basic and applied research in physics and chemistry.

·          We generated funding for our  research work in physics and chemistry through the competitive bidding process and were awarded contracts; from foundations and institutions such as the Oak Ridge National labs, NASA, the Air force, Army, Navy, NSF contracts and grants from historical foundations ,and museums. 

·         We have published over 60 papers, talks, and more than 30 government reports. 18 U.S. patents not including  foreign patents, some 22 proprietary manufacturing processing and the highest company technical awards, coauthored two books on plasma physics, contributed to books and pamphlets in the history of science and engineering , Galileo's telescope, early microscopes, Edison, Bell, etc..

   

·         Jim has worked in the fields of physics for more than 50 plus years; 20 in basic research, 20 plus years in applied research and product development for the lighting industry, and the last 17 years acting as; technical advisors, for over 35 TV and movie projects, recreating historical scientific and engineering apparatus. instruments and acting as independent scholars  for museums      

·         Rhoda has worked more than 30 years in chemistry and physics, 6 years in basic research in high temperature chemistry, 24 years in chemistry and manufacturing of photographic products. For the last several years Rhoda has taught college chemistry and   co-owned a business with Jim collecting, buying and selling scientific and engineering works of Art.          

·         We also work with the Media as science advisors and as a source of antique instruments of science and engineering  for TV shows (NOVA, Discovery, and science channels etc.). We work with authors of books and articles on the history of science and with designers of science displays in museums,    .

·         When instruments are not available we make them. We also help the actors, directors, producers, and crew learn how to operate the instruments used in the various scenes.. We have well-equipped machine and woodshops and modest chemical and electronic facilities.

 

o    Click on photo above to make it larger.

o   
This photo is of one of our early laboratories with the apparatus we used in our plasma physics and high temperature chemistry work for NASA and the U.S. Air force. We were doing basic research studies on electron transition of the outer orbits of atoms and negative ions. These data were used in the design; of the Apollo and Shuttle heat shields, lasers, energy transfer studies in the outer atmospheres of the sun and stars, the development of commercial and medical light sources, the studies of lightning, and A / H bombs, fire ball growth. Later on all of this work was exceedingly useful in improving and creating  new and better lighting devices. See list of patents below. ( light bulbs ) etc.,  etc. 

We now have turned our energies toward helping people appreciate and learn more about the significance and beauties of science, its older scientific apparatus, its experiments. We are presently working on expanding

 

·          Details and photos of some of the people and awards  we experienced

o    Click on photo above to make it larger.
This photo is of one of our early laboratories with the apparatus we used in our plasma physics and high temperature chemistry work for NASA and the U.S. Air force. We were doing basic research studies on electron transition of the outer orbits of  atoms and negative ions. These data were  used in the design of the Apollo and Shuttle heat shields, lasers, energy transfer studies in the outer atmospheres of the sun and stars, the development of commercial and medical light sources, the studies of lightning, and A / H bomb fire ball growth. later on all of this work was exceedingly useful in improving and creating  new and better lighting devices. See list of patents below.( light bulbs )etc.,  etc. 
 

o    We now have  turned our energies toward helping people appreciate and learn more about the significance and beauties of science, its older scientific apparatus, its experiments. We are presently working on expanding methods of teaching a particular part of science.--that is -- encouraging a revolution in outlining the safe guards scientist  have had to create  and continue to create to   insure  the reliability and accuracy of their data and conclusions. We firmly believe the scientific community needs, especially the teaching  aspect,   to reach out more vigorously by advertising using rational emotional techniques the nature of  how scientist cross check their data and conclusions the they reach. Some readers will point out that  It is already being done teaching  the scientific method.. Nevertheless there is strong evidence (note)  that it is not being absorbed enough by the average citizen  using this  traditional approach. Most of the people are just not getting enough of the picture of how science checks itself to help science move on at the  rate that is needed.
 

o    Last but not least We are trying to find better ways for encouraging everyone to support stronger funding for basic scientific research..

About our personal life

Click here to visit one of our favorite our projects  the world’s most precise replication of  Galileo's telescopes built for the   ISTITUTE E MUSEO DI STORIA DELLA SCIENZA, Florence Italy where the originals telescopes are on display, and for Griffith Observatory  and the  Adler Planetarium

We are very grateful to have been part the award winning  project "Forgotten Genius"

r


"Forgotten Genius" A film that, the authors acted as technical consultant for , was named the winner of the 2007 Science Journalism Award by the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The AAAS award is one of the highest given out in the world of science television, so this is a great honor for the Percy Julian film.
 

To the left

Llewellyn M. Smith, Stephen Lyons co directors of the film Forgotten Genius holding the award plaques received at the AAAS annual meeting in Boston in February 2008. They are bracketed by  Rhoda and Jim Morris technical consultants on the film  who furnished,   most of the period  instruments and chemical experiments for the laboratory scenes. We also made every effort to  contributed  our experience of the actions reactions of not only the chemistry but the drama of scientist as they are carrying out their work.

To the left part of the support team  working of the Julian film taking a short break to celebrate Rhoda's birthday on the set.
 

 

Santiago- Hudson stars as Percy Julian in "Forgotten Genius."  

"Forgotten Genius" is a biographic film about the life of pioneering African American chemist Percy L. Julian (1899-1975) produced by the WGBH/Boston PBS television program "NOVA" and funded in part by the American Chemical Society. It portrays Julian's struggles with racism and his breakthrough research on drugs to treat glaucoma and rheumatoid arthritis  (C&EN, Oct. 2, zoo6, page 52)
 

It is one of the very few  films which gives  a very  accurate and dramatic portrayal  of  how science and  scientists in the laboratory  really work. It shows the competition, the funding ,and why scientist can’t lie about the data that they present in the literature.  There are many tense scene dramatizing how very hard scientist  work to  find errors in there and other scientist's work and why it is very personal one on one issue to be the rightest and the firstest  while the rest of the scientific community gobbles up your data in the next rush of being the rightest and firstest in the next step of discovery.

Rhoda and Jim  under the co- direction  of Llewellyn M. Smith Llewellyn M. Smith, Stephen Lyons participated vigorously in the laboratory set ups furnishing the equipment the experiments and  advice of the scientist emotional response during the dramatic  ups and downs that scientist experience as they  push themselves and their equipment to the limits  to be right and to be first in the discovery process.

  • Below some random foots showing a bit of the cross-section of the work and projects we do.

 


 


Rhoda setting up a refluxing experiment for a lab scene in The Profits of Science Fiction


Click on photo for more detail
We have built two of these beautiful  instruments. One  goes on exhibit at Griffith Observatory October 2006.  The other served as a prototype and backup  during the building process. Each  has nearly 100 parts and over 400 hot gilded stampings. It has taken upwards 1200 man hours of research and shop time to build them. Tolerances are within approximately 1.5 % of the original, most times closer both inside and outside. They are total replicas.




Jim & Rhoda setting up the labs and  experiments for a TV show called "The Prophets of Science Fiction".
It reenacts scenes about Jules Verne, HG Wells, and Frederick Soddy a Nobel Prize Chemist, and demonstrates how both science fiction writers were ahead of the scientists of the day!  Rhoda above is setting up the chemical apparatus and Jim on the left is setting up a spectroscope for elemental analysis while the set crews put up camera and lighting equipment. Jim has been dressed up  in an 1860 outfit as a stand in!

Rhoda & Jim re-enacting lightening!


Below Follows a Detailed History of Jim and Rhoda's Professional Experience  in Science and Engineering Including a Selection of Papers, Books, TV/Movies, Patents and Professional Societies.
 

Rhoda: Summary of Work Experience

Prior to Rhoda's current co-ownership of  "Antiques of Science and Technology" with Jim and teaching college chemistry at community colleges, Rhoda's career spanned from chemical research and development to a technical and business career in photographic chemistry.  At Avco Corporation in Wilmington, MA she worked on synthesis of ablation materials for re-entry vehicles, followed by basic research in plasma physics (described in more detail by Jim below).  In her early career at Polaroid Corporation, Rhoda was Chemical Analytical Development Group Leader for the integral film division in the development of dye, silver and polymer systems in instant photography products. 

 

Her career then turned toward the technical manufacturing and business side of chemistry.  She became responsible for the production operations of all sheet and filter polarizing products as Technical Production Manager for the Polarizer Division, followed by Chemical Development Manager for Integral and Industrial Coatings to Materials Manager for the five Photographic Component Manufacturing plants.  Before leaving Polaroid to work with Jim in their joint venture, she was Material Manager for all of the Chemical Production plants for the integral and industrial products of the Polaroid Corporation

 

Besides her contributions at AVCO where she co-authored a series of papers on high  temperature radiative properties of atmospheric gases, further discussed below, her technical achievements at Polaroid included studies of photographic  mechanisms, stabilizing gelatin based intermediates against bacterial degradation, and characterizing fine chemicals used in dye, addenda, and polymer systems.  These included establishing processes in photographic media such as gelatin/aldehyde cross-linking using infrared spectroscopy and viscosity techniques and characterizing solvent addenda on dye developers by thermal differential scanning calorimeter - the latter yielded important links of these states to changes in dye transfer rates in the photographic negative.

In her business and manufacturing responsibilities Rhoda concentrated on new product  introductions and eventually on business practices and turnaround efforts.   As an example of a major achievement, she led a cross functional team in an eighteen month program to manufacturing excellence through a supply chain management initiative.  This effort improved customer deliveries to 95%, reduced inventories and production cycle times by 50% for a $40mm industrial coating and chemical mix plant.  Team members included operations, materials, engineering, finance, program, and training group leaders.  These improvements were driven by extensive staff and plant member training in MRP (Manufacturing Resources Planning) practices. 

Since leaving Polaroid Rhoda has been teaching college chemistry and working with Jim in their business "Antiques of Science and Technology".   See below for a description of their activities in this joint venture.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Jim: Basic Research 1955 to 1972

Jim's research work had been sufficiently original, timely and useful to permit him to be elected as a member of the executive committee for the American Physical Societies Gaseous Electronics Conference and to be voted as the chairman of the Arc Symposium Committee. Jim also had been included as one of the participants in the Department of Air Force's Data Exchange Agreement made between the German Ministry of Defense and the Department of Defense U.S.A.  Every major university and research laboratory in this country and overseas doing serious work in plasma spectroscopy had asked to be put on his distribution list for reprints and papers covering his research or requested individual reprints.  Jim  was a reviewer of scientific papers for the Physical Review, Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, Review of Scientific Instruments, Journal of the Optical Society of America, Journal of Geophysical Research, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and Applied Optics.  Jim has authored and coauthored proposals to government agencies outlining research work sufficiently original and well planned to be awarded 10 million, current, dollars worth of contractual work over his career.


Jim: Illinois Institute of Technology.  1955 to 1959.

Research assistant - Assistant Physicist. Jim worked as the project leader in the Optics section where his activities centered around planning and performing experiments to measure the thermal radiation properties of metals and dielectrics.  Specifically these measurements were to determine the total and spectral emissivity and solar absorptivity.  Jim designed and operated equipment to measure the spectral and total emissivity’s for temperatures from the boiling point of liquid nitrogen to the melting point of the material under study.  He also made measurements of the temperature dependence of the  complex index of refraction of tungsten up to 2000°K. He contributed to infrared guided missile programs where the  interest was in building target simulators, also in counter measure efforts  studying short lived pyrotechnic flares.  Through these projects Jim gained a substantial background in physical and applied optics, and visible and infra  red photometry.

 

Jim: University of Chicago.  1959 to 1961.

Staff member. At the Laboratories for Applied Sciences, Jim directed the efforts of 15 to 20 professionals, technicians and machinist and carried out spectroscopic diagnostic studies of the plasmas that were being used for material evaluations and MHD devices.  Initially, these studies were temperature measurements and evaluations of conditions of equilibrium.  Jim was later responsible for the study of a magnetically collimated arc which was identical to the type used in the DCX thermonuclear experiments at Oak Ridge.  The goal for this project was to reach an understanding of the "Physics" of this type of arc and to obtain a sufficient amount of information about individual arcs to allow a proper  selection of one which would be most suitable for the DCX project.  This work included measuring the translational and thermal velocities of the ions in the arc column with line shifts and shapes.  Jim evaluated the excitation temperatures from line intensities, determined the electron and ion temperatures using Langmuir probes and made mass spectrometric determinations of the density ratio of the various ions present.  'While at the university, Jim continued some emissivity measurements begun at Illinois Institute of Technology.  These studies were made for heat shield materials of space reentry vehicles.  Jim also did some arc electrode development work for high powered electric arcs.

 

Jim & Rhoda: AVCO Corporation, Wilmington, Massachusetts.  1961 to 1971

Staff Scientist up to Group leader and. Senior Consulting Scientist. At AVCO, Jim organized a group of 4 to 8 physicists and chemists to do research work in low temperature plasma physics.  Jim funded this group by originating and submitting proposals of research to Air Force and NASA agencies.  In performing this research Jim  planned the efforts, actively participating in every aspect of the research from designing equipment, building it, operating it, to reducing data and writing reports and papers.  The output of these efforts resulted not only in contributions to the scientific literature but to the engineering community as well. The topics of this research centered around radiation and thermal properties of partially ionized nitrogen, oxygen, air, argon and hydrogen.  For the radiation studies Jim attacked the problem by establishing, with existing theories, the major radiating mechanisms.  Jim then designed experiments around constricted electric arc generated plasmas to obtain data to test the accuracy of these theories.  This required measurements of spectral line f values, widths, and or shapes, recombination and free continuum cross sections.  These data had to be supported with temperature density and equilibrium measurements.  The wavelength regions used covered the far infrared to the vacuum ultraviolet.  For the latter wavelength region, Jim had aided in the pioneering efforts to establish the constricted arc as a useful plasma source for vacuum ultra violet radiation studies.  Jim have also contributed in a similar manner to establishing the use of pulsed arcs to reach high plasma temperatures. From an engineering point of view the radiation data were put into tabular form for predicting the radiation transfer or output for a large range of plasma conditions. Jim carried out work similar to the radiation studies for the electrical and thermal conductivities of partially ionized gases.  In this area, Jim was able to resolve the major differences that existed between theory and experiment and aided in establishing under what circumstance arcs could be useful plasma sources for determining thermal conductivities. Along with these programs, Jim contributed to the development and manufacture of high efficiency high intensity infrared lamps for military applications.  Concurrently,  Jim ran shock tube studies for the emissivity of molecular radiators in the far infrared.  Jim also had recently and independently developed spectrochemical apparatus and techniques for the detection and quantitative measurement of gases such as oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, as well as other elements whose spectral lines fall in the vacuum ultraviolet region of the spectrum.  Jim also had  developed an integrating sphere reflectometer for the far infra red, and a radiation standard for the vacuum ultraviolet. Incidentally the work supported the heat shield design for NASA's Apollo Moon program

 

Jim:  National Bureau of Standards 1971  1972

Group leader Plasma Physics brought in contracts from the Air force to look at the continuum and line radiation in the vacuum ultra violet. The production of a Mercury laser for the green portion of the spectrum. The electrical conductivity of Mercury.  Jim developed a radiation standard for the vacuum ultra violet using end on constricted electric arc technology.

 

Jim:  General 'Telephone & Electronics Corp. for the industrial / commercial division Lighting division  1972 to 1993.  

 

Experience in Applied Research Inventing and Product Development

Jim joined  GTE  Sylvania in 1971 as an engineering specialist in the physics laboratory at Danvers headquarters. Jim was appointed senior engineering specialist in 1972 and manager of the engineering, computer and math department in 1974. In 1975. Jim became manager for the new product support laboratory in Danvers headquarters   In 1979  Jim was appointment as manager of new Product Development Group for the General 'Telephone & Electronics Corp. for the industrial / commercial division Lighting division.  Jim was awarded more than 18 U.S.  patents, won the highest company award for technical achievement, including dozens of new products and major improvement of processing and manufacturing. In staff development  Jim's teams won major company awards for their contribution to the product lines.

 

Jim & Rhoda: Antiques of Science and Technology 1995 to Present

 

Rhoda and Jim have ten years of experience as technical consultants and advisors to the media filming business on science related movies, books and television projects. We furnish and or build props, assist in the development of experiments, and train personnel in the operation of equipment and conducting technical experiments.  A major interest and concern of our work is to assist the director, actors and staff to produce accurate as well as interesting science scenes and enactments for their program.

 

Resources:

In the past 35 years we have developed a collection of over 2000 historical instruments,  artifacts of science and technology.  Our resources also include a laboratory for conducting chemical, physics, and electronic experiments. We have a very complete shop for wood, glass, metal, and electronics fabrication and testing. Using his extensive experience in constructing experimental apparatus and product prototypes in 40 years of R&D, Jim has developed skills in restoring and replicating historically significant scientific instruments and devices. Our large number of diversified instruments, the knowledge gained in researching their history, a replication, fabrication and testing capability, and our 40 years of professional experience in science and industry enable us to offer what we believe is a valuable resources for the media in filming science and technology subjects.

 


 

Examples Technical Papers,Talks,U.S. Patents, Movies and, Books

 

With B. D. Schurin, SOME THERMAL RADIATION PROPERTIES OF METALS,

Bulletin of APS Series II, 2_, (1957).

 

With O. H. Olson, SOLAR ABSORPTIVITY, BASED ON WEIGHTED ORDINATE

INTEGRATION, JOSA 47, 1048, (1957).

 

With B. D. Schurin and 0. H. Olson, METHOD FOR MEASURING TOTAL

EMISSIVITY AS A FUNCTION OF TEMPERATURE AND ANGLE, JOSA 4J, 34l,

(1957).^

 

With O. H. Olson, TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF SPECTRAL EMISSIVITY

OF PLATINUM, RHODIUM, AND PALLADIUM, JOSA 4J, 1052, (1957).

 

With A. H. Thomas, and B. D. Schurin, A TEMPERATURE ERROR ASSOCIATED WITH EMBEDDED THERMOCOUPLES, Rev. Sci. Inst. 29, 1045, (1958)

.

With B. D. Schurin and O. H. Olson, THE TOTAL EMISSIVITY OF AIRCRAFT CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS SYMPOSIUM ON THERMAL PROPERTIES OF

GASES, LIQUIDS AND SOLIDS, ASME, (February 1959).

 

With O. H. Olson, A METHOD OF MEASURING THE EMISSIVITIES OF

DIELECTRIC MATERIALS, JOSA 4j?, 509, (1959).

 

With P. J. Dickerman, EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE TEMPERATURE IN A FIELD FREE PLASMA, (Proceedings of the Symposium on Optical

Spectrometric Measurements of High Temperatures), University of

Chicago Press, (1960).

 

THE CONDITION OF EQUILIBRIUM IN THE STANDARD D-C IRON ARC, JOSA

50, 500, (I960).

 

THE ROLE OF OPTICS IN PLASMA RESEARCH, Research Invited paper by

the Chicago Optical Society, (May I960).

 

 COMMENTS ON THE MEASUREMENTS OF THE EMITTANCE OF THE GLOWBAR

 RADIATION SOURCE, JOSA , (l96l).

 

 COMPLEX REFRACTIVE INDEX OF TUNGSTEN AT ELEVATED TEMPERATURES, JOSA,

 51,,  1471,  (l961).

 

With G. Bach, RESEARCH ON RADIATION FROM ARC HEATED PLASMA NITROGEN,

ARL Plasma Arc Seminar, (September 1962).

With B. D. Schurin, SOME THERMAL RADIATION PROPERTIES OF METALS,

Bulletin of APS Series II, 2_, (1957).

 

With O. H. Olson, SOLAR ABSORPTIVITY, BASED ON WEIGHTED ORDINATE

INTEGRATION, JOSA 47, 1048, (1957).

 

With B. D. Schurin and 0. H. Olson, METHOD FOR MEASURING TOTAL

EMISSIVITY AS A FUNCTION OF TEMPERATURE AND ANGLE, JOSA 4J, 34l,

(1957).^

 

With 0. H. Olson, TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF SPECTRAL EMISSIVITY

OF PLATINUM, RHODIUM, AND PALLADIUM, JOSA 4J, 1052, (1957).

 

With A. H. Thomas, and B. D. Schurin, A TEMPERATURE ERROR ASSOCIATED
 WITH EMBEDDED THERMOCOUPLES, Rev. Sci. Inst. 29, 1045, (1958)

.

With B. D. Schurin and O. H. Olson, THE TOTAL EMISSIVITY OF AIRCRAFT
 CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS SYMPOSIUM ON THERMAL PROPERTIES OF

GASES, LIQUIDS AND SOLIDS, ASME, (February 1959).

 

With O. H. Olson, A METHOD OF MEASURING THE EMISSIVITIES OF

DIELECTRIC MATERIALS, JOSA 4j?, 509, (1959).

 

With P. J. Dickerman, EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF THE TEMPERATURE IN

A FIELD FREE PLASMA, (Proceedings of the Symposium on Optical

Spectrometric Measurements of High Temperatures), University of

Chicago Press, (1960).

 

THE CONDITION OF EQUILIBRIUM IN THE STANDARD D-C IRON ARC, JOSA

50, 500, (I960).

 

THE ROLE OF OPTICS IN PLASMA RESEARCH, Research Invited paper by

the Chicago Optical Society, (May I960).

 

 COMMENTS ON THE MEASUREMENTS OF THE EMITTANCE OF THE GLOBA BAR

 RADIATION SOURCE, JOSA , (l96l).

 

 COMPLEX REFRACTIVE INDEX OF TUNGSTEN AT ELEVATED TEMPERATURES, JOSA,

 51,,  1471,  (l961).

 

With G. Bach, RESEARCH ON RADIATION FROM ARC HEATED PLASMA:  NITROGEN,

 ARL Plasma Arc Seminar, (September 1962).

 

With R U. Krey(Morris)  and R. L. Garrison, ON EQUILIBRIUM IN CONSTRICTED

ARGON ARCS USED TO TRANSITION PROBABILITY MEASUREMENTS, Meeting

of Plasma Physics Section of the APS, (November 1966).

 

THE ROLE OF VACUUM ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION TRANSFER IN HIGH PRESSURE

ARC COLUMNS, Invited paper presented by the Westinghouse Research

Laboratories, Pittsburgh, Pa., (Spring 1967).

 

With R. U. Krey(Morris)  and R. L. Garrison, RADIATION STUDIES OF ARC HEATED

NITROGEN, OXYGEN, AND ARGON PLASMA, Final Report, ARL 68-0103, (May 1968). 

Contract No . AF33(6l5)-2976.

 

With R. P. Rudis and J. Yos, EVALUATION OF HIGH TEMPERATURE GAS

 TRANSPORT PROPERTIES, Final Report, AVSSD-o4l4-67-RR, (September

 

 1967).  Contract NASW-1188. With R. U. Krey(Morris) and R. L. Garrison,

BRIM3STRAHIUNG AND RECOMBINATION RADIATION OF NEUTRAL AND

 IONIZED NITROGEN, Phys Rev. Vol. 100, 1&7, (1969).

 

 With R. L. Garrison, THE DC CONSTRICTED ARC AS A VACUUM ULTRAVIOLET

 RADIATION STANDARD IN THE 900 TO l800 A WAVELENGTH REGION, Presented

 at the Second International Conference on Vacuum Ultraviolet Radiation Physics

at Gatlinburg, Term., (May 1968).

 

With R. U. Krey(Morris) EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF Hp STARK BROADENING THEORY AT

HIGH ELECTRON DENSITIES, Phys. Rev. Letters, Vol. 21, No. 15, 1043, (1968).  Also presented

at the Gordon Conference on Spectral Line Shapes in Andover, New Hampshire, (July 15-19, 1968).

 

 With R. U. Krey(Morris) EXPERIMENTAL TOTAL AND TOTAL LINE RADIATION OF

 NITROGEN OXYGEN, AND ARGON PLASMAS, Phys. Fluids, (June 1970).

 

 With R. U. Krey(Morris), ARGON CONTINUUM RADIATION, JQSRT, 9-1633, (1969).

 

 With R P  Rudis and J. Yos, MEASUREMENTS OF ELECTRICAL AND THERMAL

 CONDUCTIVITY OF HYDROGEN, NITROGEN, AND ARGON AT HIGH TEMPERATURES,

 Phys. Fluids, 13, 6o8, (1970).                                          \

 

 With R  L. Garrison, MEASUREMENT OF RADIATION EMITTED, F VALUES,

 AND STARK HALF WIDTHS FOR THE STRONG VACUUM ULTRAVIOLET LINES OF

 0I AND NI, Phys. Rev., 5-112, (1969).

 

 With R. L. Garrison, A RADIATION STANDARD FOR THE VACUUM ULTRA VIOLET,

JQSRT, 9-1407, (1969).

 

 With M  Dalton, THE EMESS.IVITY OF GLOBAR VERSUS TEMPERATURE FOR

USE IN TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS WITH AN OPTICAL PYROMETER, Applied

Optics, 8, 1737, (1969).

 

AN EMPIRICAL METHOD OF COMPARING AND PREDICTING THE AXIS

TEMPERATURE OF ARGON CONSTRICTED ARCS, JQSRT. 9-1629. (1969).

 

With R. U. Morris. MEASUREMENT OF LINE SHIFTS AND OF THE FREE

CONTINUUM OF ARGON FOR THE 20000°K TO 30000°K TEMPERATURE REGION. 
(Symposium on the phys. of High Pressure Arc). Meeting

with Gaseous Electronics Conference. Gatlinburg. Tenn. (October 1969)

.

With R. U. Morris. OBTAINING HIGH PLASMA TEMPERATURES USING

PULSED CONSTRICTED ARCS. Rev. Sci. Inst. 5_, 661 (1970) . 

presented at Arc Symposium. Gatlinburg, Tenn., (October 1969).

 

A SIMPLE ELECTROMECHANICAL SENSOR FOR POSITIONING AND HOLDING

APPLICATIONS, Rev. Sci. Inst. 41, 877.  (1970).

 

With R. U. Morris. RADIATION STUDIES OF ARC HEATED PLASMAS

ARL Final Report. ARL 70-0038. (January 1970).

 

THE VACUUM ULTRAVIOLET CONTINUUM OF DOUBLY IONIZED ARGON,

 (Second Arc Symposium) 23rd Annual Gaseous Electronics Conference.

 Hartford. Conn.,  (October 1970).

 

With R. U. Morris. MEASUREMENTS OF ELECTRON BROADENED WIDTHS

 OF ATOMIC NITROGEN LINES,  (Second Arc Symposium) 23rd Annual

Gaseous Electronics Conference, Hartford. Conn., (October 1970)

 

J. C. Morris with P. L. Patterson, LTE AND RELATIVE TRANSITION PROBABILITIES OF

ATOMIC SCANDIUM, presented at the Twenty-Fifth Annual Gaseous Electronics
Conference, London, Ontario, Canada.  (October 1972).

 

J. C. Morris and J. H. Walker, "Electron neutral Transport Cross Section of Mercury,"

J. Appl. Phys., V 44, No. 10, (October 1972).

 

J. C. Morris with P. J. Gardner, W. R. Watson, H. G. Silver and J. A. Scholz,

"A New Metal Halide Ultraviolet Curing Source", P 45-49, J of the IES, V 5 No. 1

(October 1975).

 

J. C. Morris with E. A. Dale, F. T. Ulrich, "Conversion of Incandescent Lanp Sockets

to Fluorescent in the Home Market", Ltg. Design and Appl., (March 1978), P 18-23.

 

J. C. Morris with W. M. Keefe, W. Walter, "Semi-empirical Model for the Electrical

Conductivity of the Scandium sodium Iodide Arc Lanp", J of  IES, (July

 

J.C. Morris A SOLAR GUIDANCE SYSTEM FOR MODEL PLANES AND
SHIPS, American Modeler. (May 1959) .

 

J.C. Morris A HOME MADE FORGE FOR MELTING METALS. Popular Science,
(February 1959).
 

J. C. Morris USING A GRID DIP METER FOR FINDING HIDDEN METAL OBJECTS, Popular

Electronics, (1962).

 

J.C. Morris A SIMPLY CONSTRUCTED MILLING ATTACHMENT FOR METAL
LATHES. Popular Science. Spring 1971.

 

J.C. Morris Radio direction finding used to find Ships in distress with  Warren Andrews

presented to Coast Guard  Spring 1887

 

J.C. Morris Who Really invented Radio

 

J.C. Morris  Challenges in Accurately Replicating Historic Scientific Instruments and

Experiments for Educational Television Requirements.

Presented at the XXII Scientific Instrument Symposium Sept 2004 Newport News Virginia
 


Selection of U.S. Patents

PAT. NO.  Title

5,959,404  Starting aid for metal halide lamps 

5,323,091  Starting source for arc discharge lamps  6/21/1994

5,100,031  Method and apparatus for dosing and dispensing mercury into discharge lamps 6/21/1994 

5,003,214 Metal Halide Lamp Having Coating On The Arc Tube 3/26/1991

4,963,790  Low wattage metal halide discharge lamp  10/16/1990

4,859,899  Metal halide lamp having heat redistribution means  9/22/1989

4,850,500  Dimpled arc tube having no internal end pockets and a lamp employing same  7/25/1989

4,850,499  Method to reduce color temperature variation in metal halide arc tubes  7/25/1989

4,791,334  Metal halide lamp having heat redistribution means 

4,480,296 Two Filament Lamp For Automobile Headlight  10/30/1984

4,234,822 Control Circuit Providing Constant Power Source 11/18/1980

4,191,947 Intrusion Alarm System  3/4/1980

4,174,944 Single Lead Electrically Activated Flash Lamp  11/20/1979

4,158,878 Means For Electrically Contacting Flash Lamp Having External Conductive Coating  6/19/1979

4,170,769 Audio Detector Alarm  10/9/1979

4,119,888 Operating Circuit For Flash Lamp Directly Coupled To AC Source  10/10/1978

4,095,140 Trigger Circuit For Flash Lamp Directly Coupled To AC Source 6/13/1978

3,931,536  Efficiency arc discharge lamp  1/6/1976

 


Samples of TV  and Movies that we have contributor to with instruments and as scientific advisors

 

 Nova:  Percy Julian Program

 Discovery: Brilliant Minds: Secret of the Cosmos

 Unsolved History: Forensics in the White House

 NOVA: The Science Odyssey

 The Spanish Prisoner

 The Golden Gate Bridge-The American Experience

 The Most Dangerous Woman in America: Typhoid Mary

 NOVA: John Adams Project

 Alexander Graham Bell's 1881 efforts to help save President Garfield's Life (for the Japanese TV).

 Adolphus Washington Greely & His1881-1884 Lady Franklin Bay Expedition to the Artic

 


Books

 

Coauthor of

 

 Galileo's Telescope The Instrument That Changed the World" edited by Giorgio Strano, Publ. Giunti 2008 (isbn 978-88-09-05938-2
 

Title, Optical Spectrometric  Measurements of High Temperatures

J.C.Morris etal.

1960 U. Chicago Press

 

Title, Radiation Studies of Arc Heated Plasmas

With J.M. Yos

U.S. Department of Commerce

Dec 1971

 

Contributor to
 

Title, True Secrets of Washington, D.C. Revealed

2003 Eden Entertainment Limited, Inc.

 

Title, Using Technology to Study Cellular and Molecular Biology

Office of Science Education, NIH

 

Title Transmitter  Hunting Radio Direction Finding Simplified

J. D. Moell & T.N. Curlee  TAB books Blue Ridge Summit Pa. 1987

 

Society Memberships for Jim and or Rhoda

 

AAAS professional member

American Chemical Society

The Scientific Instrument Society of London

History of Science Society

The MIT Dibner Institute for History of Science and Technology

Antique Wireless Association

Morse telegraph club, among others