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- Thomas Greenslade has been a member of the Kenyon College faculty since 1964. During the last thirty years, he has become the country's academic physicist most closely identified with the study of nineteenth-century physics apparatus.
www.uvm.edu/~dahammon/museum/Greenslade.html
Thomas Greenslade received an A.B. in physics from Amherst College in 1959 and a doctorate in experimental low temperature physics from Rutgers University in 1965. From 1964 to 2002 he was a physics faculty member at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, and taught part-time there for the next three years.
- mailto:greenslade@kenyon.edu
- Professor Emeritus of Physics
Thomas Greenslade received an A.B. in physics from Amherst College in 1959 and a doctorate in experimental low temperature physics from Rutgers University in 1965. From 1964 to 2005 he taught physics at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio.
Sep 1, 1993 · All about Lissajous figures. Thomas B. Greenslade, Jr. Phys. Teach. 31, 364–370 (1993) https://doi.org/10.1119/1.2343802. Share.
Thomas B. Greenslade, Jr. (greenslade@kenyon.edu) is a Professor Emeritus of Physics at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, U.S.A. He received his A.B. in physics from Amherst College in Massachusetts in 1959 and his doctorate in experimental low temperature physics from Rutgers University in New Jersey in 1965.
Thomas Greenslade received an A.B. in physics from Amherst College in 1959 and a doctorate in experimental low temperature physics from Rutgers University in 1965. From 1964 to 2005 he...
- Thomas B. Greenslade, Thomas B. Greenslade Jr
- Morgan & Claypool Publishers, 2018
- illustrated
Discover life events, stories and photos about Thomas Greenslade (1590–1648) of England.
Thomas Greenslade has been a member of the Kenyon College faculty since 1964. During the last thirty years, he has become the country's academic physicist most closely identified with the study of nineteenth-century physics apparatus.