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>
 
=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=
 
=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]

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.