Abstract
As a scientist Gordon Sutherland made, at a critical time, a major contribution to the transformation of infrared spectroscopy from a research technique practised in few laboratories into a powerful and widely used method for analysis and for the determination of molecular structure. A physicist by training, he was happy to be described as a chemical physicist or a biophysicist in relation to different aspects of his researches. Later in his career he was a successful Director of the National Physical Laboratory and then Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He played an active role in British science policy. He died on 27 June 1980, in his seventy-third year, some 3 years after his retirement from the Mastership of Emmanuel College. Although after his graduation from St Andrews University Sutherland spent most of his active life in England or in the United States, he always retained the accent of a Scot, and a very deep affection for his native country. In a characteristically thoughtful way, Sutherland left behind a brief account in his own words of the earlier part of his life and career. A number of substantial quotations from his autobiographical document are included in this memoir.
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3 articles.
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