Arguably the First World War saw the greatest advent of new science and technology and the role of science in warfare than any conflict hitherto. On land the innovations of barbed wire, machine guns and eventually, tanks changed the nature of land battles. At sea, radio communications changed operation of surface fleets and the introduction of submarine warfare changed the nature of war at sea. This war saw also the advent of aerial warfare which was to change the nature of all future wars. This conference seeks to review the key ways in which physics and its mathematics changed the nature of conflict from various points of views: technical, historical and sociological.
Registration to attend this conference is free, but must be confirmed using the Conference booking form by Monday 8th June.
The programme for the day is below:
MORNING CHAIR: Dr Patricia Fara (University of Cambridge)
10.30 am WELCOME
10.40 am Professor David Edgerton (King's College London) - The Sciences and the Great War: Myths and Histories
11.30 am Dr Elizabeth Bruton (Museum of the History of Science, Oxford) - Hydrophones and Piezoelectricity: Ernest Rutherford and Anti-submarine Innovations in the Royal Navy during World War I
12.20 pm Professor Adrian Smith (University of Southampton) - Warfare and Wind Tunnel: Engineers, Physicists and the Evolution of Combat Aircraft (1914-1918)
1.15 pm LUNCH BREAK
AFTERNOON CHAIR: Professor Ray Monk (University of Southampton)
2.15 pm Dr Arne Schirrmacher (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) - On the (Self-)Mobilization of Scientists in Germany, France and Britain: The Impact on Physics in War and thereafter
3.05 pm Dr Don Leggett (Nazarbayev University) - Reward, Credibility and the Amateur Inventor in the Great War
4 pm TEA/COFFEE BREAK
4.30 pm SUMMARY OF THE DAY'S PROCEEDINGS - Dr Michael Weatherburn (Imperial College)
There will be a conference dinner at St Cross in the evening following the end of the conference with an after-dinner talk by Dr Adam Hart-Davis (science author and broadcaster). Although the conference itself is free of charge, the dinner carries a cost of £35 to attend - booking a place for dinner can be done here.
Bed and breakfast accommodation in the Oxford colleges can be found here.
A map of the location of St Cross College in the city centre can be found here.
All-day parking in central Oxford is often limited so details of the Oxford Park and Ride are available here.