146 



ANNUAL REPORTS, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 



Photography — Continued 

 Photography of sound waves and the 

 demonstration of the evolutions of 

 reflected wave fronts with the cine- 

 matograph, by R. W. Wood. 1900: 



359-3 6 9 

 Photography of the ocean floor, by 



A. S. Laughton. i960: 319-326 

 Progress in astronomical photography, 



by Dr. Lee. 1861: 191-198 

 Progress in color photography, by G. 



H. Niewenglowski. 1898: 209-215 

 Recent progress accomplished by aid of 



photography in the study of the 



lunar surface, by Loewy and Puiseux. 



1898: 105-121 

 Recent progress in astronomical photo- 

 graphy, by C. E. Kenneth Mees. 



1953: 205-218 

 Recent progress in color photography, 



by Thomas W. Smillie. 1907: 231- 



2 37 

 Structure of Lippmann heliochromes, 



by S. R. Cajal. 1907: 239-259 

 Photomicrography 



Moving photomicrography, by W. N. 

 Kazeeff. 1937: 323-338 

 Photosynthesis 



Photosynthesis, by E. C. C. Baly. 



1929: 237-244 

 Photosynthesis and the possible use of 

 solar energy, by H. A. Spoehr. 

 1922: 175-185 

 Phototelegraphy 



Phototelegraphy, by Henri Armagnat. 



1908: 197-207 

 Telegraphy of photographs, wireless 

 and by wire, by T. Thorne Baker. 

 1910: 257-274 

 Phototropism 



Phototropism: a specific growth re- 

 sponse to light, by Earl S. Johnston. 



1934: 3i3-3 2 3 

 Physical Sciences 

 Physical science in the crime-detec- 

 tion laboratory, by J. Edgar Hoover. 

 1939: 215-221 



Relation of the physical sciences to 

 science in general, by Herman 

 Helmholtz. 1871: 217-234 

 Physics 



Applications of physics and mathe- 

 matics to geology, by C. Chree. 

 1891: 127-153 



Cultural values of physics, by David 

 Dietz. 1940: 139-154 



Elementary particles of physics, by Carl 



D. Anderson. 1949: 203-212 

 Evolution of twentieth-century physics, 



by Robert A. Millikan. 1927: 

 191-199 



Modern concepts in physics and their 

 relation to chemistry, by Irving 

 Langmuir. 1930: 219-241 



New-world picture of modern physics, 

 by James H. Jeans. 1934: 81-98 



Physics of the universe, by James Jeans. 

 1929: 161-181 



Physics: recent scientific progress. 

 1880: 235-288; 1881: 333-379; 1882: 

 459-508; 1883: 571-628; 1884: 433- 

 489; 1885; 577-636; 1887: 327-386 



Present fundamental conceptions of 

 physics, by Franz Joseph Pisko. 

 1879: 485-518 



Progress in physics in the nineteenth 

 century, by T. C. Mendenhall. 

 1900: 315-331 



Recent developments of cosmical phys- 

 ics, by James Jeans. 1927: 167-189 



Recent progress in physics, by Johannes 

 Muller. 1855: 311-423; 1856: 357- 

 456; 1857: 333-431; 1858: 372-415 



Recent progress in physics, by J. J. 

 Thomson. 1909: 185-205 



Results in the field of high-pressure 

 physics, by P. W. Bridgman. 1951: 

 1 99-2 1 1 



Romance or science? by Paul R. Heyl. 

 1933: 283-292 



Some points in the philosophy of phys- 

 ics: time, evolution, and creation, by 



E. A. Milne. 1933: 219-238 

 Syllabus of a course of lectures on phys- 

 ics, by Joseph Henry. 1856: 187-220 



Three centuries of natural philosophy, 

 by W. F. G. Swann. 1928: 233-247 



