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Key Events in the History of Electron Microscopy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2003

F. Haguenau
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Médecine Expérimentale, Collège de France, F-75005, Paris, France
P.W. Hawkes
Affiliation:
CEMES-CNRS, B.P. 4347, F-31055 Toulouse cedex 4, France
J.L. Hutchison
Affiliation:
Oxford University Department of Materials, Parks Road, Oxford GB-OX1 3PH, UK
B. Satiat–Jeunemaître
Affiliation:
Institut des Sciences du Végétal, UPR 2355 du CNRS, F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
G.T. Simon
Affiliation:
25, Park Lane, Ancaster, ON L9G 1K9, Canada
D.B. Williams
Affiliation:
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA 18015-3195, USA
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Extract

It is not easy to understand how the electron microscopes and electron microscope techniques that we know today developed from the primitive ideas of the first microscopists of the 1930s. Newcomers to the subject in particular, their time almost fully occupied with grasping practical methods and modern computing techniques, can rarely devote much attention to the history of their subject. For some, however, this is a source of frustration: If a guide to the principal stages in the development of the subject and to the main actors and their publications were available, they would find the time to study it.

Type
HISTORICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
Copyright
© 2003 Microscopy Society of America

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