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During
the Manhattan project, a tricky technical problem emerged
regarding energy levels of the conventional explosive stage
of the first nuclear weapon. There was acute disagreement
between the ballistics experts and the physicists as to what
exactly the problem was. A gifted technician on the project
named Berlin Brixner had the idea to take a high speed picture.
He was familiar with the work of Charles E. Miller, who had
demonstrated the principle of relaying an image at high speeds
through a rotating mirror in the 1930's.
They
built the first ultra-high speed rotating
mirror camera, capable of 1 million frames per second.
They photographed their experiments, and the pictures revealed
timing errors in detonation which neither the ballistics experts
nor the physicists had anticipated. This was the last major
technical hurdle of this history changing project, solved
by the ultra high speed camera.
The
technology remained classified for around ten years. It was
declassified and presented at a conference in 1953, attended
by Earl Pound, who was a professor at the University of Utah.
He and Bill Partridge formed Cordin Company in 1956 and built
a camera for a local explosives manufacturing company. The
name Cordin was taken from 'coordination', symbolic of the
coordination between government, academia and private enterprise
which created the company.
In
1959, Sid Nebeker joined the company, and took it from an
offshoot of an academic department within the University to
a fully realized high technology manufacturing company. In
our first ten years, we developed and maintained a natural
monopoly in its field, buying out our main competitor, Beckman
and Whitley, in 1969.
Since
its inception, we have always pursued the highest quality
and sophistication of high speed imaging devices. In 1982,
we began offering image converter cameras. And in 1994, we
began offering high speed imaging using CCD
technology.
Cordin
products from these three major product lines have been purchased
by leading research
centers worldwide. Our customer base has expanded from
military and explosives research facilities to include a very
broad array, including many of the research leaders in material
science, aerodynamics and hydrodynamics, internal combustion
engines, laser studies, and commercial research.
Cordin
continues to look toward the future by staying at the forefront
of imaging technology. Throughout our history, our basic commitment
has not changed. That commitment is to provide intelligent,
competent solutions to fill our customer's needs in high speed
and high technology imaging devices. It is through this commitment
that Cordin has developed and maintained an undisputed leadership
in our field.
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