Neher, Henry Victor, 1904-

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Cosmic ray physicist; professor of physics at California Institute of Technology.

From the description of Diaries. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 79357807

From the description of Papers, 1927-1967. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 78638196

Biography

Born in 1904 in Kansas, Henry Victor ("Vic") Neher grew up in California's San Joaquin Valley. His mother's family had been early pioneers and owned extensive farmland in California. Neher attended Pomona College (AB in physics, 1926) and began graduate study at Caltech in 1928, receiving his PhD in physics in 1931. He was then invited by Robert A. Millikan (Nobel Prize, physics, 1923) and Ira Bowen to become part of the cosmic-ray research group Millikan was forming, which came to include Carl D. Anderson (Nobel Prize, physics, 1936), Seth Neddermeyer, and William Pickering, who later became director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Beginning in 1922, Millikan and Bowen had begun launching high-atmosphere balloons equipped with instruments to measure the intensity of cosmic rays at various points in North America, from Texas to North Dakota. Neher's first such data-gathering trip took place in 1932 to the high latitudes of Canada, and he, along with Pickering, went with Millikan to India in 1939-1940. The balloon experiments were later transferred to airplanes. In the 1940s and 1950s Neher worked on determining the so-called latitude effect, which aimed to measure the intensity of cosmic radiation as a variant of latitude. In the course of this work he spent considerable time in and developed a love for Greenland and the arctic. It was eventually determined that the density of cosmic-ray bombardment was much greater at the earth's poles than at the equator and that it also varied with the sun's activity. A further outcome of Neher and Millikan's work was confirmation that the earth's magnetic center is 250 miles from its geographic center. Neher was appointed instructor and later professor of physics at Caltech. He retired in 1970.

During World War II Neher worked at the Radiation Laboratory at MIT (the "Rad Lab"), where he designed and built microwave vacuum tubes, including the K-band oscillator, otherwise known as the "Neher tube."

From the guide to the H. Victor Neher Papers, 1916-1994, (California Institute of Technology. Caltech Archives)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Neher, Henry Victor, 1904-. Diaries. American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library
creatorOf H. Victor Neher Papers, 1916-1994 California Institute of Technology. Archives.
creatorOf Neher, Henry Victor, 1904-. Papers, 1927-1967. American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library
creatorOf Biehl, A. T. A New Cosmic-Ray Telescope for High Altitudes, 1948 Jan. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Library and Archives
creatorOf Simpson, John A.,. Mainer IV experiments : summaries, no date. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Library and Archives
creatorOf Biehl, A. T. Recent Studies of the Cosmic-Ray Latitude Effect at High Altitudes, 1948 Jan. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Library and Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Biehl, A. T. person
associatedWith California Institute of Technology corporateBody
associatedWith Millikan, Robert Andrews, 1868-1953. person
associatedWith Simpson, John A., person
Place Name Admin Code Country
India
Subject
Cosmic rays
Cosmic rays
Microwave tubes
Physicists
Physics
World War, 1939-1945
Occupation
Physicists
Activity

Person

Birth 1904

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