The Discovery of Argon: A Case for Error-Statistical Reasoning
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Date
2007
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Abstract
Rayleigh and Ramsay discovered the inert gas argon in the atmospheric air in 1895 using a carefully designed sequence of experiments guided by an informal statistical analysis of the resulting data. The primary objective of this article is to revisit this remarkable historical episode in order to make a case that the error?statistical perspective can be used to bring out and systematize (not to reconstruct) these scientists' resourceful ways and strategies for detecting and eliminating error, as well as dealing with Duhemian ambiguities and underdetermination problems as they arose in the context of their local research settings.
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modern, method, experiment, mathematics, atmospheric science, chemistry,
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10.1086/652961
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Downstream publication: Spanos, Aris. (2010) "The Discovery of Argon: A Case for Learning from Data?" 77(3), pg. 359-380.