Difference between revisions of "Science in the Shadows"

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Delia's papers contain her notes for [[Science in the Shadows]], created by ring modulating the [[Muirhead]] and [[B & K]] oscillators, recording it at 7&frac12; inches per second and playing it back at double speed.<ref>[[DD161018]]: Delia's handwritten notes for [[Science in the Shadows]].</ref>
 
Delia's papers contain her notes for [[Science in the Shadows]], created by ring modulating the [[Muirhead]] and [[B & K]] oscillators, recording it at 7&frac12; inches per second and playing it back at double speed.<ref>[[DD161018]]: Delia's handwritten notes for [[Science in the Shadows]].</ref>
  
If Delia created it in 1962, it is in the public domain.
+
=Copyright=
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If Delia recorded it in 1962, it in is in the public domain. If she recorded it in 1963, it will be in BBC copyright until the end of 2033.
  
 
=Availability=
 
=Availability=

Revision as of 16:11, 9 May 2016

Science in the Shadows was a one-hour BBC TV programme transmitted on 30th February 1963, following the Royal Society's publication of a report about the 'brain drain': the mass emigration from the UK of ‘scientists of very high quality’ whose loss ‘left serious gaps behind them’.[1]

Delia's papers contain her notes for Science in the Shadows, created by ring modulating the Muirhead and B & K oscillators, recording it at 7½ inches per second and playing it back at double speed.[2]

Copyright

If Delia recorded it in 1962, it in is in the public domain. If she recorded it in 1963, it will be in BBC copyright until the end of 2033.

Availability

  • Broadcast on the 30th February 1963.[3]

References

  1. The emigration of scientists (Royal Society, London, 1963).
  2. DD161018: Delia's handwritten notes for Science in the Shadows.
  3. Brian Balmer, Matthew Godwin and Jane Gregory, The Royal Society and the ‘brain drain’: natural scientists meet social science (2009), note 36.