Notes
1A recent example appeared as, ‘Possible Mechanism for Enormous Electromechanical Response’, News Release, Brookhaven National laboratory (4 May 2008).
2Katzir discusses this more succinctly in ‘From Explanation to Description: Molecular and Phenomenological Theories of Piezoelectricity’, Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences, 34 (2003), 69–94.
3Olivier Darrigol, Worlds of Flow. A History of Hydrodynamics from the Bernoullis to Prandtl (Oxford, 2005).
4C. Smith and M.N. Wise, Energy and Empire: A Biographical Study of Lord Kelvin (Cambridge, 1989).
5Andrew Warwick, Masters of Theory: Cambridge and the Rise of Theoretical Physics (Chicago, 2003).