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Home >> About MPL >> History    
  History
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After less than two years as MPL director, Eckart’s attention was spread further abroad as he took on the directorship of Scripps Institution of Oceanography from 1948 to 1950. During that period he shifted MPL from the direct administration of the UC headquarters to a division of SIO, as it has remained ever since. In 1952 Eckart left for a sabbatical year at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University. Upon his return to Scripps he decided not to continue as MPL director and was replaced by Sir Charles Wright, who had retired to Canada after a career that included directorship of the Royal Navy Scientific Service. After serving from 1952 to 1955 Sir Charles retired and was replaced by Alfred B. Focke, a Navy Electronics Laboratory group leader and chief scientist for the nuclear depth-charge test, Operation Wigwam. In 1957 Focke moved on to be chief scientist at Point Mugu Naval Missile Test Center. Dr. Fred N. Spiess was appointed director in 1958. At that time, also, primary sponsorship of MPL was transferred from the Navy’s Bureau of Ships to the Office of Naval Research (ONR) and the supporting research equipment that had been provided by the Navy Electronics Laboratory was transferred to the university.

MPL’s scientific and engineering staff grew during the 1950s, but primarily through strengthening the initial threads. George Shor joined Raitt’s group and through successive expeditions they developed seismic refraction capabilities to map the structure of the crust beneath the deep ocean. The results generated a picture of the Pacific Basin that showed a crust much thinner than that of the continents and revealed the surprising fact that the quantity of sediment expected from millennia of continental erosion was not there. This was one of the phenomena that forced the acceptance of the plate tectonics concept, explaining that as old crust was subducted at plate boundaries, the accumulated sediment was cycled onto and underneath the overriding plates.

On the signal-processing front, theoretical concepts quickly outran hardware capabilities of the analog world and vacuum-tube computers. At MPL there were imaginative efforts to build new devices, particularly by Philip Rudnick and Victor C. Anderson, a group leader who had been and MPL graduate student. Anderson was quick to see the opening provided by representing the sonar signal by a close-spaced series of polarity samples, resulting in the beginnings of digital-signal processing—a major advance that provided the base for experimental sonar installations, soon put to use in Navy operational systems. The first of these was the delay line time compressor, a system in which a simple digitized version of an acoustic signal could be repetitively and rapidly played back as the basis for making fine-scale correlation or frequency analyses over wide bands in real time. The second was digital multibeam steering with which the outputs from an array of independent sound receivers (hydrophones) could be combined to provide simultaneous parallel outputs focused in many different spatial directions. These techniques led to rethinking of the nature of submarine sonar systems.

While these two main lines of investigation were the primary concerns, there were others leading to the gradual broadening of the scope of MPL’s activities to other aspects of experimental physics at sea and in the laboratory. Fred Fisher, University of Washington who completed his University of Washington thesis with work conducted at MPL, expanded Leonard Liebermann’s work on sound absorption: Spiess devised and demonstrated a submarine tactical communication system and collaborated with UCLA scientists in a program of measuring gravity at sea; Liebermann developed and applied a new technique for measuring fine-scale inhomogeneities in the ocean; and Rudnick collaborated with other SIO scientists investigating radio-wave propagation in the ocean.

One nonacoustic effort began with Sir Charles’s interest in geomagnetism. On the 1952 Capricorn Expedition, Ron Mason had used a ship-towed magnetometer adapted from a World War II airborne system by Jeff Frautschy and others at Scripps. Sir Charles was aware that the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey was being tasked to make a dense seafloor topographic survey off the West Coast of the United States and helped arrange it so that Mason could tow the magnetometer from the survey ship and that MPL would provide the necessary engineering support, which was led by Arthur Raff who had previously been part of Russell Raitt’s group. The result was the famous magnetic anomaly map demonstrating the existence of bands of anomalously high and low magnetization having continuity over hundreds of miles—the fundamental building blocks of seafloor spreading and its successor plate tectonics. Subsequently, Victor Vacquier, who had devised the airborne flux gate magnetometer joined MPL and, refining the more robust proton precession magnetometer approach, expanded MPL’s seagoing geomagnetic research program.

One other activity of importance was the involvement of senior staff members (particularly Spiess and Anderson) in various Navy research advisory committees and workshops that were instituted to maintain fruitful interactions between the science and Navy operational communities. This produced numerous dividends in motivating new research directions and generating multi-institution collaborative programs
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