Interview with John B. Whiteoak

Description

John B. Whiteoak, 1937- . Interviewed 27 February 1978, length of interview: 37 minutes.

Creator

Papers of Woodruff T. Sullivan III

Rights

NRAO/AUI/NSF

Type

Oral History

Interviewer

Sullivan, Woodruff T., III

Interviewee

Whiteoak, John B.

Original Format of Digital Item

Audio cassette tape

Duration

37 minutes

Interview Topics

1958-62 as (optical) grad student at Australian National University; optical/radio cooperation (Bok-Pawsey); early polarization work on Parkes dish; work on H I interferometery at Owens Valley in mid-1960s.

Start Date

1978-02-27

Notes

This interview was conducted as part of Sullivan's research for his book, Cosmic Noise: A History of Early Radio Astronomy (Cambridge University Press, 2009). In preparing Sullivan interviews for web publication, the NRAO/AUI Archives has made a concerted effort to obtain release forms from interviewees or from their heirs or next of kin. In the case of this interview, we have been unable to find anyone to sign a release. In accordance with our open access policy, we are posting the interview. If you suspect alleged copyright infringement on our site, please email archivist @ nrao.edu. Upon request, we will remove material from public view while we address a rights issue. Please contact us if you are able to supply any contact information for the interviewee or his heirs/next of kin.

We are grateful for the 2011 Herbert C. Pollock Award from Dudley Observatory which funded digitization of the original cassette tapes. Please bear in mind that an interview must be heard with the awareness that different people's memories about an event will often differ, and that memories can change with time for many reasons including subsequent experiences, interactions with others, and one's feelings about an event.

Series

Working Files Series

Unit

Individuals Unit

Citation

Papers of Woodruff T. Sullivan III, “Interview with John B. Whiteoak,” NRAO/AUI Archives, accessed December 22, 2024, https://www.nrao.edu/archives/items/show/15295.