Sir William Lawrence Bragg James Bryant Conant Roscoe Dickinson Samuel Goudsmit Roger Hayward Werner Heisenberg Walter Heitler Arthur Lamb Irving Langmuir G. N. Lewis Fritz London Robert Millikan Robert Mulliken A. A. Noyes J. Robert Oppenheimer Wolfgang Pauli Linus Pauling Erwin Schrödinger John Slater Arnold Sommerfeld J. Holmes Sturdivant Richard Tolman Max Theodore Felix von Laue Don YostView all Key Participants
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 Portrait of Arthur Amos Noyes. 1920s.
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A. A. Noyes1866-1936
Papers of Arthur A. Noyes, 1883-1936 Location: Caltech Institute Archives Address: Mail Code 015A-74, Pasadena, CA 91125 Size: 1 linear foot Phone: 626-395-2704 Fax: 626-793-8756 Email: archives@caltech.edu Web: http://archives.caltech.edu
Correspondence
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. April 25, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling and Ava Helen Pauling to A.A. Noyes. May 22, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. July 12, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. November 22, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. December 17, 1926.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Samuel Goudsmit. November 16, 1927.
- Letter from A.A. Noyes to Linus Pauling. November 29, 1927.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to G.N. Lewis. March 7, 1928.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. February 24, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. March 21, 1929.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes. January 27, 1931.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to A.A. Noyes and J.P. Buwalda. February 2, 1934.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to the Executive Council, California Institute of Technology. August 10, 1936.
Pictures and Illustrations
Manuscript Notes and Typescripts
Quotes
"I think that it is very interesting that one can see the [psi] functions of Schrödinger’s wave mechanics by means of the
X-ray study of crystals. This work should be continued experimentally. I believe that much information regarding the nature
of the chemical bond will result from it."
Linus Pauling. Letter to A. A. Noyes. 1926.
"...[T]o awaken an interest in chemistry in students we mustn’t make the courses consist entirely of explanations, forgetting
to mention what there is to be explained."
Linus Pauling. Letter to A. A. Noyes. November 18, 1930.
"I consider that the field of work in which Dr. Pauling is engaged, namely the study of the chemical bond and of valence from
the standpoint of modern physics, is the most important line of research in theoretical chemistry today; and I venture to
believe that there is no one in the world who in the same degree has chemical background and at the same time has the physical
knowledge, mathematical power, and originality required for the handling of this problem."
A. A. Noyes. Letter to William Foster. October 15, 1931.
"When I was in Europe...I received a letter from A. A. Noyes saying that he was writing to offer me an appointment as 'Assistant
Professor of Theoretical Chemistry and Mathematical Physics,' and I accepted it, but by the time that I got here it had been
changed to 'Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry' . . . I don't know what happened with the physics, whether Millikan
objected to my having a joint appointment or whether Noyes decided . . . [Noyes] was preventing me from going to Berkeley,
and he may have decided that he didn't want me associated with the physics department in this way, that perhaps I would shift."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"In 1931 when my papers on the nature of the chemical bond appeared, Professor Noyes, who was chairman of the Division of
Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, said that I probably would get the Nobel Prize someday. Well, I thought, that's nice of
the old guy to say that, but I'm a little skeptical myself. And as the years went by, I thought, I don't do the sort of work
for which Nobel Prizes are given."
Linus Pauling. NOVA Interview. 1977. Audio Clips
Video Clips
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