During the 1950s, with the electron microscope fast becoming the characterisation tool par excellence for many scientific and engineering disciplines, the University of Sydney recognised that its academic community needed access to electron microscopy to do quality research. In 1958, in a bold move, the University established a centralised facility – the Electron Microscope Unit – comprising two support staff and the premier microscope of the day, the Siemens Elmiskop I. The Electron Microscope Unit was unique for its time and has since become a model for many advanced microscopy centres at other universities. During the past 50 years, the unit has supported a steadily growing amount and diversity of research, and has developed into an integral part of the University. Today, the Electron Microscope Unit has nearly 30 different microscopes and more than 45 staff members.
This captivating book presents 50 great moments from the past five decades of the Electron Microscope Unit's activities. Blending history and science in an engaging style, 50 Great Moments tells the story of the unit's creation and profiles the key figures that have forged the facility into the success that it is today. The book looks at the instruments, events and achievements that have defined the unit's character and contributed so much to Australian microscopy and microanalysis. Finally, this volume explores some of the important research done by the scientists and engineers who have used the unit's advanced microscopes.
This book makes a fascinating read for those with an interest in the historical development of Australian microscopy and microanalysis, and it will be an important reference for scholars studying the history of our nation's science.
Kyle Ratinac is the medicine and health sciences faculty research manager at Macquarie University.
List of acronyms
Prefixes and units
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Simon Ringer
- Towards an electron microscope unit
Kyle Ratinac - The first director, Dr D. Gordon Drummond
Kyle Ratinac - The early days of the Electron Microscope Unit
David Gordon Drummond - Transmission electron microscopy
Kyle Ratinac - Specimen preparation in the biological sciences
Maret Vesk and Anne Simpson - First vacation school in electron microscopy
Kyle Ratinac and Anne Simpson - Exploring the ultrastructure of plants
Maret Vesk - Academic status: ‘a rose by any other name ...’
Maret Vesk - Scanning electron microscopy
Kyle Ratinac - Specimen preparation in the physical sciences
Kyle Ratinac and Adam Sikorski - The second director, Professor David J.H. Cockayne
Kyle Ratinac - School visits and Schools Open Days
Clare O'Connor - X-ray microanalysis and the Australian Microbeam Analysis Society
Clive Nockolds and Kyle Ratinac - Thursday lunches
Anthony Romeo, Teresa Dibbayawan and Kyle Ratinac - That hit a nerve: the structure and regeneration of nerve grafts
Kyle Ratinac - Organising microscopy conferences
Guy Cox and David Cockayne - Cryogenic specimen preparation
Guy Cox - The move to the Madsen Building
David Cockayne - EMUser and the EMU newsletter
David Cockayne and Kyle Ratinac - Image analysis
Guy Cox and Allan Jones - Fracture of materials: learning from failure
Kyle Ratinac - The Australian EM Newsletter
Guy Cox - International workshops: the EMU goes global
Maret Vesk and Guy Cox - The NWG Macintosh Centre for Quaternary Dating
Kyle Ratinac - Advanced transmission electron microscopy
Kyle Ratinac - The duty microscopist system
David Cockayne - Optical microscopy
Guy Cox - The radial distribution function of amorphous materials
David Cockayne - The creation of Imagelab
Dennis Dwarte - Scanning probe microscopy
Filip Braet and Pall Thordarson - Establishment of the Australian Key Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis
David Cockayne - The science of emulsion polymerisation
Kyle Ratinac - e-Research: the EMU in the digital domain
Peter Hines and Guy Cox - The Key Centre’s postgraduate coursework degrees
Kyle Ratinac, Lilian Soon and Anne Simpson - Awards and honours to staff and students
Lilian Soon - Microscopes on the Move officially launched
Clare O'Connor - The third director, Professor Simon Ringer
Kyle Ratinac - The deputy directors
Kyle Ratinac - The laboratory managers
Clare O'Connor - Fluorescent proteins of reef corals: natural sunscreens and biotechnological tools
Anya Salih - The Nanostructural Analysis Network Organisation
Clare O'Connor - X-ray microtomography at the EMU
Allan Jones - The first PhD students enrol in the Key Centre
Clare O'Connor and Kyle Ratinac - Putting the past under the microscope
Wendy Reade and Judith Field - Atom probe tomography
Kyle Ratinac - Involvement with the ARC Centre of Excellence for Design in Light Metals
Clare O'Connor - ‘In every atom slumbers the might of the self’: the science of atom probe tomography
Michael Moody and Simon Ringer - Microscopy and sustainability
Kyle Ratinac - Establishment of the Australian Microscopy and Microanalysis Research Facility
Julie Cairney - The golden jubilee of the Electron Microscope Unit
Kyle Ratinac, Uli Eichhorn and Julie Cairney
Epilogue: a vision of the future
Simon Ringer
Appendix 1: a timeline of major events in the history of the EMU
Appendix 2: EMU staff list (1958–2008), NWG Macintosh Centre for Quaternary Dating
Appendix 3: the EMU's 40th anniversary celebrations
Appendix 4: newsletters produced by the EMU
About the authors
Size: 260 × 210 × 20 mm
408 pages
Copyright: © 2008
ISBN: 9781920898762
Publication: 02 Dec 2008