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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John Slater1900-1976
John Clarke Slater Papers Location: American Philosophical Society Address: 105 South Fifth Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 Size: 81 linear feet, 50,000 items Phone: 215-440-3400 Fax: 215-440-3423 Email: manuscripts@amphilsoc.org Web: http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/s/slater.htm
Correspondence
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Published Papers and Official Documents
Manuscript Notes and Typescripts
Quotes
"I published a paper with Jack Sherman on the calculation of some of these overlap integrals with a simplification.... It's
in The Nature of the Chemical Bond, the results are -- with a simplification of some sort; it's like taking Slater functions, I don't know what it was, but
actually evaluating the overlap integrals. Our conclusion was that the bond strength function giving angular dependence alone
is really pretty good -- not perfect but pretty good."
Linus Pauling. AHQP (Archive for the History of Quantum Physics), interview transcript part 2. Interview by John Heilbron. March 27, 1964.
"The theory of quantum mechanical resonance of molecules among several valence-bond structures constituted a major addition
to the classical structure of organic chemistry. This theory was developed in the period from 1931 on by a number of investigators
including Slater, E. Huckel, G. W. Wheland and me."
Linus Pauling. "Fifty years of progress in structural chemistry and molecular biology," Daedalus, 99 (Fall 1970): 988-1014. 1970.
"Just as evolution is inseparably connected with Darwin (and not with Wallace, whose paper on evolution prompted Darwin to
write The Origin of Species), so too Pauling and the chemical bond are tightly associated, and Slater's position, though important,
is secondary and supportive."
Robert J. Paradowski. The Structural Chemistry of Linus Pauling, pg. 333. 1972.
"One could say that Pauling's 'failure' was to plant a lot of seeds, basic ideas, without working them out fully.... As soon
as Slater gets an idea he works it out to the end before he gets a new one. But that is also dangerous, of course because
you look at the trees and you don't see the forest...[Pauling] looks at the forest and lets other people...work out the specific
individual things in detail; he has a terrifically lively intellect, reading [Pauling's] paper, the information here is just
tremendous, the ideas flow out of the pen, and there are several lifetimes of work...to be done."
Sten Samson. Interviewed by Anthony Serafini for Linus Pauling: A Man and His Science. 1984. Audio Clips
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