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H-Sites: Harvard Life and Learning

Collected by: Harvard University Archives

Archived since: Mar, 2015

Description:

As part of its mission to document Harvard University, the Harvard University Archives has collected across several centuries thousands of personal archives of individuals and records of organizations affiliated with the University, including faculty, students, and clubs. Many of these materials are now created on web sites. The purpose of H-Sites: Harvard Life and Learning is to collect and make accessible this web-based material. As it grows, the H-Sites collection will document the intellectual and social interests of a segment of the community of people who live, work, and learn at Harvard: primarily faculty and students, but also, occasionally, visiting scholars and staff. Their lives both inside and outside of classrooms and offices are an integral part of Harvard's culture and history. HOLLIS catalog: http://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990132517800203941/catalog

Subject:   Universities & Libraries Harvard University

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Title: Bernard Gottschalk : Talks, Papers, and Software

URL: https://github.com/BernardGottschalk/BG-distribution/

Description: Bernard Gottschalk (1935-2021) was a German-American physicist. Gottschalk received his PhD in 1962 from the Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory, used for physics research and after 1961, one of only 20 centers worldwide to specialize in proton-beam therapy. After working at Fermilab and Cern, he held a professorship at Northeastern University from 1965 until 1981. Gottschalk then returned to Harvard and joined the proton therapy group at the Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory as senior research fellow. He remained an active collaborator after the Cyclotron was retired in 2002. Gottschalk researched the basic physics of protons traversing media at therapy energies and developed software to compute energy loss and scattering which was used to model beamline transport and design double scattering systems. Professor Gottschalk's Github site served as a repository of his talks, papers, and software. The site also contains his description of the site and some of the contents. Collected by the Harvard University Archives as part of the personal archive of Bernard Gottschalk.

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