In the great laboratories which serve^ today's chemical and process indus·, tries, the professional technologist has many marvelous "assistants." Take, for example, the "electronic chemist" in the Research Laboratory of the General Electric Company's Chem istry Division. This complex machine, a mass spectrometer, quickly and ac curately analyzes unknown gases. Its skillful operator is GE's Dr. Francis J. Norton.
© Beztman
Archive
What Mme. Curie never had! Modern analytical and control instruments like this are the vital link in the continued development, as well a s the oper ation of the vast chemical and process industries. T h e y have become Big Business.
47 years ago Mme. Curie's lab was typical of the times. Her work in the field of radio activity, which contrib uted so substantially to science and won for her the Nobel Prize, is all the more amazing when you look at hei rudimentary equipment and realize what she did without. Fortunate is the analytical chemist of today with his modern instruments, latest apparatus and new chemicals, who can begin years ahead of where chemist Curie had to sign off.
Analytical and control instruments are p u r c h a s e d and spe cified b y professional chemists, engineers a n d scientists, w h o d e p e n d on the workmaterial presented only in A N A L Y T I C A L C H E M I S T R Y . That's w h y A N A L Y T I C A L C H E M I S T R Y gets your sales story to these hard-to-reach technologists like n o t h i n g else can.
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY The Workmagazine
for Instrumentation,
Control and Analysis
A n AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Publication Advertising Management: REINHOLD PUBLISHING CORPORATION 330 West 42nd Street, New York 36, Ν. Υ. CHI
1468
CA GO
·
CLEV
ELAND
·
SANFRANCISCO
·
LOS
ANT
GELES
CHEMICAL
AND
ENGINEERING
NEWS