U.S. INVESTIGATING COSMIC RAY.—Dr. Carl D. Anderson (seated) and Dr. Robert B. Brodie, two scientists who have been called in to co-operate with the United States Navy in exploring the most powerful force known, to exist, the cosmic ray. The scientists have been provided with a B-29 “flying laboratory,” from which tests are to be made in the stratosphere nearly eight miles from the ground. Anderson is a Nobel Prize winner, and, is shown examining test apparatus in a ground laboratory at the vast ordnance test station near Inyokern,, in the Mojave Desert.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 4 February 1947, Page 5
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93U.S. INVESTIGATING COSMIC RAY.—Dr. Carl D. Anderson (seated) and Dr. Robert B. Brodie, two scientists who have been called in to co-operate with the United States Navy in exploring the most powerful force known, to exist, the cosmic ray. The scientists have been provided with a B-29 “flying laboratory,” from which tests are to be made in the stratosphere nearly eight miles from the ground. Anderson is a Nobel Prize winner, and, is shown examining test apparatus in a ground laboratory at the vast ordnance test station near Inyokern,, in the Mojave Desert. Greymouth Evening Star, 4 February 1947, Page 5
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