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the
Allison Laboratory Building and Parker Hall, the headquarters of the University's mathematics department, in order to clear space for the construction of a two-story ,151,000-square-foot academic space known as the Academic Classroom and Laboratory Complex (ACLC) and a three-story, 48,000-square-foot campus dining hall. The Allison Laboratory Building was fully demolished by early 2021, while, for currently unknown reasons, construction plans were amended to allow Parker Hall to remain standing.
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In the 1960s, Auburn
University constructed the Allison Laboratory Building, which housed the University's physics department until May 2019, when the department was moved into the newly-expanded Leach Science Center. Earlier in 2019, the Auburn University Board of Trustees had voted to demolish both
282:. As Dean of the Graduate school, he helped found the school's first Ph.D. programs. He stayed at the Polytechnic Institute for 31 years, until mandatory retirement. He then returned to Emory and Henry College as chair of the science division for three years. This was followed by teaching physics at
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After several years and several attempts to verify the claims of
Allison, the method of magneto-optic spectroscopy was found to be unsuitable for the detection of the new elements. The Allison magneto-optic effect, or simply the
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from 1956 to 1968. After this last lecturing position, he returned in 1969 to Auburn
University and continued his lab work until one month before his death on August 2, 1974.
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160:. He claimed to have discovered two new elements (later discredited) using this method. He taught at the Auburn University Physics Department for more than thirty years.
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in 1914, it was known that several elements had not yet been discovered. Their chemical properties could be deduced from the vacant places in the periodic table of
184:. Allison erroneously claimed that he had discovered the two missing elements with his magneto-optic spectroscopy. He claimed to have found element 87, now called
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to get a degree in physics. After several years there (teaching at Emory and Henry and working on his Ph.D. in alternate years) he switched to the
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180:(which became Auburn University), starting in 1930, he developed a method that he believed measured the time dependence of the
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Allison, Fred; Murphy, Edgar (1930). "Evidence of the
Presence of Element 87 in Samples of Pollucite and Lepidolite Ores".
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In 1922, Allison was invited to create the physics department of
Alabama Polytechnic Institute, which later became
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Allison, Fred; Bishop, Edna R.; Sommer, Anna L. (1932). "Concentrations, Acids and
Lithium Salts of Element 85".
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Allison, Fred; Bishop, Edna R.; Sommer, Anna L.; Christensen, J. H. (1932). "Further
Research on Element 87".
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674:"Faculty from the Department of Physics Met for the Last Time in the Allison Laboratory Building"
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176:. Several scientists claimed the discovery of the missing elements. During Allison's work at the
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726:"Auburn University announces construction of new classroom building, three-story dining hall"
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460:; Adloff, Jean-Pierre (2008). "Fred Allison's Magneto-Optic Search for Elements 85 and 87".
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Allison, Fred; Murphy, Edgar J. (1930). "A Magneto-optic Method of
Chemical Analysis".
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Allison, Fred (1932). "Magneto-optic method of analysis as a new research tool".
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Trimble, R. F. (1975). "What happened to alabamine, virginium, and illinium?".
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152:(July 4, 1882 – August 2, 1974) was an American physicist. He developed a
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in 1904. After teaching at the same college, he decided to attend
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claimed to have discovered tritium in 1933 using the same method.
271:, and receiving his Ph.D. in physics in 1920 while working with
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Industrial & Engineering
Chemistry Analytical Edition
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I. Langmuir; R. N. Hall (1989). "Pathological Science".
700:"$ 83M academic classroom building gets final approval"
434:"The Allison Magneto-Optic Method of Chemical Analysis"
196:. He also claimed to have found element 85, now called
212:. He named the two elements after the American states
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Auburn University College of Sciences and Mathematics
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Biggs, Lindy; Knowlton, Stephen (September 2, 2008).
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486:: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of September 2024 (
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103:Unfounded, erroneous claim to have discovered
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809:Fellows of the American Physical Society
565:Journal of the American Chemical Society
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378:Journal of the American Chemical Society
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252:July 4, 1882 and earned a degree from
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590:transcript of Langmuir's 1953 speech
164:Discovery of alabamine and virginium
698:Woodham, Brian (28 February 2019).
436:. Mike Epstein, PhD (professor at
236:in his now famous 1953 lecture on
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799:Emory and Henry University alumni
204:sand, a mineral which is rich in
156:method that became known as the
335:Carr, Howard E. (January 1975).
794:Johns Hopkins University alumni
779:20th-century American chemists
754:Family history of Fred Allison
724:Pierce, Phil (17 March 2019).
672:Gebhardt, Maria (7 May 2019).
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804:University of Virginia alumni
316:. The Encyclopedia of Alabama
178:Alabama Polytechnic Institute
158:Allison magneto-optic method
592:, see "Allison Effect" part
438:Mount St. Mary's University
220:, virginium and alabamine.
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784:Huntingdon College faculty
154:magneto-optic spectroscopy
789:Auburn University faculty
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523:10.1103/PhysRev.35.285.2
262:Johns Hopkins University
222:Wendell Mitchell Latimer
90:Johns Hopkins University
254:Emory and Henry College
476:(inactive 2024-09-18).
269:University of Virginia
250:Glade Spring, Virginia
94:University of Virginia
43:Glade Spring, Virginia
474:10.1333/s00897082174a
462:The Chemical Educator
248:Allison was born in
238:pathological science
730:Alabama News Center
704:The Auburn Villager
651:1989PhT....42j..36L
616:1975JChEd..52..585T
577:10.1021/ja01341a026
550:10.1021/ja01341a025
515:1930PhRv...35..285A
458:Kauffman, George B.
417:10.1021/ac50077a005
390:10.1021/ja01373a005
353:1975PhT....28a.107C
232:, was discussed by
206:rare earth elements
284:Huntingdon College
138:Carroll M. Sparrow
16:American physicist
624:10.1021/ed052p585
362:10.1063/1.3068789
280:Auburn University
168:From the work of
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116:Scientific career
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273:Jesse Beams
76:Nationality
763:Categories
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194:lepidolite
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265:Baltimore
190:pollucite
109:virginium
105:alabamium
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214:Virginia
202:monazite
198:astatine
186:francium
80:American
647:Bibcode
612:Bibcode
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218:Alabama
210:thorium
107:, and
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188:, in
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711:2023
685:2023
488:link
322:2015
244:Life
216:and
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54:Died
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