Todd Mundt

19%
Flag icon
On August 2, 1932, working with a carefully prepared cloud chamber, an American experimentalist at Caltech named Carl Anderson had discovered a new particle in a shower of cosmic rays. The particle was an electron with a positive instead of a negative charge, a “positron,” the first indication that the universe consists not only of matter but of antimatter as well. (Its discovery earned Anderson the 1936 Nobel Prize.)
The Making of the Atomic Bomb: 25th Anniversary Edition
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview