Notes
From http://ninanet.com by Steve Gurevitz
"..Jaeger-LeCoultre realized the Geophysic in anticipation of the
International Geophysical Year, which ran from mid-1957 through
1958. Some 67 countries officially participated in a variety of experiments
and observations of geophysical phenomena such as aurora,
geomagnetism, glaciology and solar activity. Apparently the
Geophysic was often presented as a sign of hommage, for example
being given to the crew of the first nuclear-powered submarine, the
US Nautilus, after their successful first voyage under the north pole
in 1958.
The real highlight is the movement, designated 478/BWS/br.
nomenclature that indicates the version of caliber 478 with fine
regulation and beryllium balance and forch. It is apparently the
most highly realized version of a series of 12 1/2 ligne (about 28mm
diameter) JLC movements stretching back to about 1940, and has
been fully adjusted.
Only 1.038 examples were made in stainless steel and 30 in pink
gold.
In 1962, this automatic watch was renamed Geomatic..."
Nautilus
Construction of NAUTILUS was made possible by
the successful development of a nuclear propulsion
plant by a group of scientists and engineers at
the Naval Reactors Branch of the Atomic Energy
Commission, under the leadership of Captain Hyman
G. Rickover, USN.
In July of 1951, Congress authorized construction of
the world's first nuclear powered submarine. On
December 12th of that year, the Navy Department
announced that she would be the sixth ship of the
fleet to bear the name NAUTILUS. Her keel was laid
by President Harry S. Truman at the Electric Boat Shipyard
in Groton, Connecticut on June 14, 1952.
After nearly 18 months of construction, NAUTILUS
was launched on January 21, 1954 with First Lady
Mamie Eisenhower breaking the traditional bottle of champagne
across NAUTILUS' bow as she slid down the ways into the Thames
River. Eight months later, on September 30, 1954, NAUTILUS
became the first commissioned nuclear powered ship in the United
States Navy.
On the morning of January 17, 1955, at 11 am EST, NAUTILUS' first
Commanding Officer, Commander Eugene P. Wilkinson, ordered all
lines cast off and signaled the memorable and historic message,
"Underway On Nuclear Power." Over the next several years,
NAUTILUS shattered all submerged speed and distance records.
On July 23, 1958, NAUTILUS departed Pearl Harbor, Hawaii under
top secret orders to conduct "Operation Sunshine", the first crossing
of the North Pole by a ship. At 11:15 pm on August 3, 1958,
NAUTILUS' second Commanding Officer, Commander William R.
Anderson, announced to his crew, "For the world, our country, and
the Navy - the North Pole." With 116 men aboard, NAUTILUS had
accomplished the "impossible", reaching the geographic North
Pole - 90 degrees North.
In May 1959, NAUTILUS entered Portsmouth Naval Shipyard,
Kittery, Maine for her first complete overhaul - the first of any
nuclear powered ship - and the replacement of her second fuel
core. Upon completion of her overhaul in August 1960, NAUTILUS
departed for a period of refresher training, then deployed to the
Mediterranean Sea to become the first nuclear powered submarine
assigned to the U.S. Sixth Fleet.
Over the next six years, NAUTILUS participated in several fleet exercises
while steaming over 200,000 miles. In the spring of 1966, she
again entered the record books when she logged her 300,000th
mile underway. During the following 12 years, NAUTILUS was
involved in a variety of developmental testing programs while
continuing to serve alongside many of the more modern nuclear
powered submarines she had preceded.
In the spring of 1979, NAUTILUS set out from Groton, Connecticut
on her final voyage. She reached Mare Island Naval Shipyard,
Vallejo, California on May 26, 1979 - her last day underway. She was
decommissioned on March 3, 1980 after a career spanning 25 years
and over half a million miles steamed.
Faraday:
By the 1950?s the use of electromagnetic motors and nuclear
power created a new set of problems for watches - that of stray
magnetic fields, which rendered most watches useless. Most ?antimagnetic?
watches are only rated to 60-80 Gauss and are therefore
only suitable for resistance to slightly above normal magnetic fields.
Other companies at the same period, released ?anti-magnetic?
watches. These, however, rarely exceeded a level of resistance to
500 Gauss. They were anti-magnetic due to the beryllium balance
and pallet fork combined with an invar balance spring and an ?antimagnetic
dust cap?. The problem with this is that beryllium
contains a small amount of iron in its alloy and is therefore susceptible
to magnetism at a certain point. This is also true of the balance
spring, which, once magnetized, becomes irregular in shape and
duration of pulsation, due to the coils sticking together. The theory
behind this is quite brilliant in its simplicity: in much the same way a
compass in an iron box does not work as it is shielded from
magnetic fields, the movement of the watch continues to work due
to the same phenomenon. Similar to a Faraday cage, which
conducts stray static charges away from sensitive electronic equipment,
the cage in the watch conducts stray magnetic fields away
from the movement of the watch. For example, an 8000 Gauss
magnet, has a stray magnetic field of 500 Gauss at 6 feet, thus any
normal watch will stop functioning properly due to the movement
becoming magnetized.
What is Geophysics?
Geophysics, a branch of Earth sciences, is the study of the Earth
by quantitative physical methods, especially by seismic, electromagnetic,
and radioactivity methods. The theories and techniques
of geophysics are employed extensively in the planetary
sciences in general.