Clayton Sam White

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Clayton_Sam_White an entity of type: Thing

Clayton Samuel White (October 11, 1912 – April 26, 2004) was a physician, nuclear physicist and medical researcher, best known for developing the field of “blast and shock biology,” which explored the effects of blast and shock waves from nuclear bombs and other explosions. By bringing together the disciplines of mathematics, physics, biology and anatomy, White was able to measure the impact of nuclear weapons on physical structures and the human body. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Clayton Sam White
rdf:langString Clayton Samuel White
rdf:langString Clayton Samuel White
rdf:langString Albuquerque, New Mexico, US
xsd:date 2004-04-26
rdf:langString Fort Collins, Colorado, US
xsd:date 1912-10-11
xsd:integer 56448916
xsd:integer 1124714284
rdf:langString aviation medicine, nuclear blast biology
xsd:date 1912-10-11
xsd:date 2004-04-26
rdf:langString discovered air embolism as cause of death in blast injury
rdf:langString Clayton Samuel White (October 11, 1912 – April 26, 2004) was a physician, nuclear physicist and medical researcher, best known for developing the field of “blast and shock biology,” which explored the effects of blast and shock waves from nuclear bombs and other explosions. By bringing together the disciplines of mathematics, physics, biology and anatomy, White was able to measure the impact of nuclear weapons on physical structures and the human body. His studies, many of which were conducted at above ground tests of nuclear weapons at the Nevada Test Site, paved the way for precision bombing in support of troops in the field and helped determine how to build effective bomb shelters and treat blast victims. In a related field, White studied the biological effects of inhaling small fission particles produced by nuclear tests. He also examined, with “remarkable prescience,”the environmental impact of consumer aerosol products on the atmosphere and the health risks of inhaling man-made fibers, diesel exhaust and other substances. Another area of White’s focus was the physiological effect of the high atmosphere on the human body. His research in aviation medicine contributed significantly to the exhaustive physiological and psychological tests conducted in 1959 on the thirty-two candidates competing to become the Mercury Seven astronauts, as depicted in the book and film The Right Stuff. White’s younger brother, Byron Raymond White, served as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1962 to 1993 and as Deputy Attorney General under Robert F. Kennedy.
rdf:langString Byron White, brother
rdf:langString aging, memory loss, hypothermia, cosmic rays, geology and pollution of the upper atmosphere
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11759

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