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{{short description|German-born American astrophysicist}}
'''Bernard Haisch''' is an ] who has done research in solar-stellar astrophysics{{fact}} and stochastic electrodynamics and has developed (with Alfonso Rueda) a speculative theory proposing that a hypothetical ''"quantum vacuum inertia hypothesis"'' might provide a physical explanation for the origin of ], and more controversially, might someday be used for spacecraft propulsion.
{{BLP sources|date=February 2008}}
'''Bernard Michael Haisch''' is a German-born American ]<ref name="AMWS">{{cite encyclopedia|entry=Bernard Michael Haisch|title=]|publisher=Gale|year=2008}}</ref> who has researched solar-stellar astrophysics and ].<ref name="ufoskeptic">{{cite web|author=Haisch, Bernard|title=Dear Colleagues|website=ufoskeptic.org|url=https://www.ufoskeptic.org/home/}}</ref> Haisch, with Alfonso Rueda, developed a speculative theory that the non-zero lowest energy state of the ], as predicted by ], might provide a physical explanation for the origin of ], and might someday be used for ]. Haisch has advocated the serious scientific study of ] and is known for his interest in ] phenomena as well as a variety of other unorthodox topics.


Since 2002, Haisch has been involved with ManyOne Networks and related ] projects that aim to produce, among other things, a multimedia ]. In 2006, Haisch published a popular book attempting to reconcile modern scientific belief with traditional religious belief. Haisch attributes his spiritual interests to his educational experience at the ] (a high school affiliated with the ]) and at the ].
Haisch has advocated the serious scientific study of phenomena outside the traditional scope of science and is known for his interest in the ] as well as a variety of other unorthodox topics.

Since 2002 Haisch has been involved with the ] and related ] projects which aim to produce, among other things, a multimedia online encyclopedia.

In 2006 Haisch published a popular book in which he attempted to reconcile modern scientific belief with traditional religious belief. He attributes his spiritual interests to his educational experience at the ] (a high school affiliated with the ]), and at the St. Meinrad ] and ].


==Scientific career== ==Scientific career==


Haisch earned a Ph.D. from the ] in ] in 1975 {{fact}} and thereafter spent three years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics at the ] in ].{{fact}} Haisch was born in ] and earned a Ph.D. in ] from the ] in 1975 and thereafter spent three years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics at the ].


Haisch has worked at the Solar & Astrophysics Laboratory at ] in ] and served as deputy director of the Center for Extreme Ultraviolet Astrophysics Laboratory at the ]{{fact}}. He has been a visiting scientist at the ] in ], ] and at the ] in the ]{{fact}}. His main research from the mid 1970s until the late 1990s was high energy ], and specifically the ] and ] emissions from ] and ] on the ] and other ]. Haisch has worked at the Solar & Astrophysics Laboratory at ] in ] and as deputy director of the Center for Extreme Ultraviolet Astrophysics Laboratory at the ]. Haisch was a visiting scientist at the ] in ], ], and at the ] in the ]. His primary research from the mid-1970s until the late 1990s was high energy astrophysics, specifically the ] and ] emissions from ] and ] on the ] and other ].


Haisch has published more than one hundred research papers on a variety of topics (some more speculative than others) in mainstream journals, including some very prestigious ones, such as ], ], ], ], and ]. He also served for ten years as an editor of the ''Astrophysical Journal''{{fact}}. Haisch has published more than one hundred research papers on a variety of topics, many in journals such as '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']''. Haisch also edited the ''Astrophysical Journal'' for ten years.


In the 1990s, Haisch and Alfonso Rueda developed a "quantum vacuum inertia" hypothesis responsible for mass.<ref name="Matthews_1994">{{cite journal|author=Matthews, Robert|date=February 4, 1994|title=Inertia: Does Empty Space Put Up the Resistance?|work=]|volume=263|issue=5147|pages=612–613|doi=10.1126/science.263.5147.612}}</ref><ref name="Powel_1994">{{cite magazine|author=Powell, Corey S.|date=May 1994|title=Unbearable Lightness|work=]|volume=270|issue=5|pages=27–28|doi=10.1038/scientificamerican0594-27}}</ref><ref name="Levin_2009">{{cite journal|author=Levin, Yefim S.|date=January 27, 2009|title=Inertia as a zero-point-field force: Critical analysis of the Haisch-Rueda-Puthoff inertia theory|work=]|url=https://journals.aps.org/pra/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevA.79.012114}}</ref> The inertialess "SHARP drive" in ]'s '']'' was named for ], Haisch, Rueda, and ].<ref name="Clarke_1997">{{cite book|author=Clarke, Arthur C.|authorlink=Arthur C. Clarke|year=1997|title=]|pages=64,255–256}}</ref><ref name="Gilster_2004">{{cite book|author=Gilster, Paul|year=2004|title=Centauri Dreams: Imagining and Planning Interstellar Exploration|pages=174}}</ref>
===Speculative proposals regarding inertialess drives===


Haisch was editor-in-chief of the '']''.<ref name="Haisch_Sims_2004">{{cite journal|author1=Haisch, Bernard|author2=Sims, Marsha|year=2004|title=A Retrospective on the ''Journal of Scientific Exploration''|work=Journal of Scientific Exploration|volume=18|issue=1|url=https://www.scientificexploration.org/docs/18/jse_18_1_haisch.pdf}}</ref>
In a long series of papers, Haisch and Alfonso Rueda, a physicist currently teaching in the Department of Electrical Engineering, ], ], have developed a controversial hypothesis in the context of ]. In his recent popular book (see section below), Haisch has described this hypothetical ''quantum vacuum inertia hypothesis'' as follows:
{{quotation|There exists a background sea of quantum light filling the universe and that light generates a force that opposes acceleration when you push on any material object. That is why matter seems to be solid, stable stuff that we, and the world, are made of. So maybe matter resists acceleration not because it possesses some innate thing called mass as Newton proposed and we all believed, but because the zero-point field exerts a force whenever acceleration takes place.|Bernard Haisch, ''The God Theory''}}


In addition to papers in mainstream journals and conference proceedings, Haisch also published papers in '']'' magazine and the ''Journal of Noetic Sciences'', a ] journal published by the ].
This assertion, that ] experience a ] due to the ], and that this ''"electromagnetic reaction force"'' is responsible for the ] of material objects, apparently rests upon a computation in which Haisch and Rueda claim to have computed a nonzero ''"zero point field Poynting vector"''. (See the 1998 ''Foundations of Physics'' paper cited below.)

However, computations by other physicists, such as ], apparently contradict this result. The mainstream view is that the so-called zero point field does ''not'' give rise to a physical force on observers accelerating with respect to "the vacuum". This casts doubt upon the ''"inertia modification drive"'' concept; see ] for details.

Some of this theoretical work has been funded by ] and ] (independently of the now defunct ]). Haisch has stated

{{quotation|I will be the first to admit that my work with Rueda and others on a possible connection between inertia and the electromagnetic quantum vacuum is speculative, and could well be totally wrong in the end.|Bernard Haisch, from the ]}}

but adds that forthcoming experiments may test some of the predictions of stochastic electrodynamics.

One of these papers was directly but unintentionally involved in the saga of ] ] ].<ref> by Joel Achenbach, ], ] ]</ref>

===Unorthodox publications===

Haisch is a former editor of the ], which publishes papers on "topics outside the established disciplines of mainstream science" such as ] effects, ]s, and ]s. Concerning his (unpaid) involvement with JSE, Haisch has stated:
{{quotation|I think it is important for science to apply its tools to things that may lie outside the current corpus of scientific knowledge. There is no way to tell in advance where the next discoveries lie, so if most of what has appeared in JSE proves to be wrong (as it might) publishing on those topics is still a valid and, in my opinon, necessary function of science.|Bernard Haisch, message in the ] of this article}}

In addition to papers in mainstream journals and conference proceedings, Haisch has published papers in such unorthodox places as ''Science and Spirit'' magazine and the ''Journal of Noetic Sciences'', a ] journal published by , which says that it ''"sponsors leading-edge research into the potentials and powers of consciousness."''


==Other ventures== ==Other ventures==
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===California Institute for Physics and Astrophysics=== ===California Institute for Physics and Astrophysics===


In 1999 Haisch founded the in ], an organization mainly devoted to the study of the electromagnetic quantum vacuum and founded by private philanthropic money. The institute formerly employed five full time physicists doing research on ], ] and ]. Haisch served as the institute's director from 1999 until 2002. In 1999, Haisch founded the California Institute for Physics and Astrophysics in ], an organization mainly devoted to studying the electromagnetic quantum vacuum and funded by private philanthropic money. The institute formerly employed five full-time physicists researching ], ] and ]. Haisch served as the institute's director from 1999 until 2002.


===UFO Skeptic=== ===UFO Skeptic===


Haisch has also created a website called , which promotes the investigation of ] by "professional scientists". In an open letter addressed to scientists, Haisch wrote in part: Haisch created a website, ''UFO Skeptic'', advocating professional scientists to investigate UFO phenomena.
{{quotation|I have learned quite a bit about the UFO phenomenon over the years (certainly more than I had bargained for) and have met many of the leading figures, some credible, some deluded...There are astronomers and pilots and NASA engineers -- and others who have been around the block a few times when it comes to observing natural phenomena -- who have witnessed events for which there is no plausible conventional explanation...There is another aspect to the UFO phenomenon that involves politics and secrecy rather than observational evidence. Over the years I have gotten to know individuals who for one reason or another would be aware of the existence of black programs and secret projects...I see myself a bit like the kid standing next to the kid looking through the hole in the big tall fence at the baseball game. This means that the closest I am getting to inside information will be a recounting of what is going on in there. I myself am definitely not an insider, but certain contacts I have acquired and/or befriended over a long period of time seem to be on the periphery of some kind of inside which appears to contain at least remarkable information, and apparently more than that. Let me be (somewhat) more specific. I now have three completely independent examples of individuals whom I trust reporting to me that individuals they trust have admitted to handling alien artifacts in "our" possession in the course of secret official duties. (The special access level in the one case for which I know it is R, a not widely known SCI level whose existence was finally verified for me by someone who himself had a very high access level, though short of that one, as being "reserved for someone at the very top." I do not know, however, whether it is specifically reserved or designated for this topic.) It is interesting that from the clandestine intelligence world perspective the scientific community, for all of its technical and theoretical sophistication, is viewed as remarkably naive in certain respects. Over the course of time I have learned how it would indeed be possible to maintain decades-long secrecy on this topic and why this might be justified. ...I propose that true skepticism is called for today: neither the gullible acceptance of true belief nor the closed-minded rejection of the scoffer masquerading as the skeptic. One should be skeptical of both the believers and the scoffers.|Bernard Haisch, UFO Skeptic website}}

===''The God Theory''===

Haisch has recently published a book entitled ''The God Theory'', in which he writes
{{quotation|I offer a genuine insight into how you can, and should, be a rational, science-believing human being and at the same time know that you are also an immortal spiritual being, a spark of God. I propose a worldview that offers a way out of the hate and fear-driven violence engulfing the planet.|Bernard Haisch, ''The God Theory''}}


===Digital Universe=== ===Digital Universe===


Since 2002 Haisch has been Chief Science Officer of ], which is headquartered in ] and lead by ]. Since 2004 he has also served as president of the related ], which, among other things, aims to create a peer-reviewed alternative to ], seeking to provide a comprehensive and reliable account of current mainstream scientific theory, evidence, and belief. In 2002, Haisch became the Chief Science Officer of ManyOne Networks. Since 2004, he also served as president of the now defunct ], which, among other things, aimed to create a peer-reviewed alternative to ], seeking to provide a comprehensive and reliable account of current mainstream scientific theory, evidence, and belief.<ref name="Keim_2007">{{cite journal|author=Keim, Brandon|date=March 2007|title=News feature: WikiMedia|work=]|publisher=Nature Publishing Group|volume=13|issue=3}}</ref>

==Misplaced Pages controversy==

In response to the Misplaced Pages article about him, Haisch wrote an op/ed piece in the ''Los Angeles Times'' in which he criticized Misplaced Pages's policies and founding principles, alleging that "the negative slants and biased cherry picking of facts ... can paint a quite inaccurate portrait." He also raised doubts that the content of Misplaced Pages would aggregate towards accuracy, since "if it does get fixed it could change again five minutes hence."<ref>'''',a '']'' editorial, Bernard Haisch published ] ]</ref>

==Book and publications==
*{{cite book|author=Haisch, Bernard|title=The God Theory: Universes, Zero-point Fields, And What's Behind It All| location=York Beach, ME|publisher=Red Wheel/Weiser Books| year=2006|id=ISBN 1-578-63374-5}}
**

Selected mainstream papers by Bernard Haisch on astrophysics:
* {{cite journal | author=Haisch, B.; Strong, K.T.; Rodono, M. | title=Flares on the Sun and other stars | journal = Annual Reviews of Astronomy & Astrophysics | volume = 29 | year = 1991 | pages = 275}}
* {{cite journal | author=Haisch, B.; Schmitt, J.H.M.M.; Fabian, A.C. | title=Disappearance of coronal X-ray emission in stars with cool dense winds | journal = ] | volume=360 | year=1992 | pages=239}}
* {{cite journal | author=Haisch, B.; Antunes, A.; Schmitt, J.H.M.M. | title=Solar-like M-class X-ray flares on Proxima Centauri observed by the ASCA satellite | journal = ] | volume=260 | year=1995 | pages=1327}}

A few representative publications regarding the proposed physical origin of inertia as an electromagnetic drag force and hypothetical spacecraft propulsion schemes:
*{{cite journal| author=Haisch, B; Rueda, A.; Puthoff, H. E. |title=Inertia as a zero-point-field Lorentz force |journal=Physical Review A|volume=49|year=1994|pages=678-694}}
*{{cite journal| author=Haisch, Bernard; and Rueda, Alfonso |title=Contribution to inertial mass by reaction of the vacuum to accelerated motion |journal=Found. Phys.| volume= 28 |year=1998 |pages = 1057-1108}}
*{{cite arXiv| author=Haisch, Bernard; and Rueda, Alfonso |title=Toward an Interstellar Mission: Zeroing in on the Zero-Point-Field Inertia Resonance|eprint=physics/9909043| year=1999| version=] ]}}
*{{cite journal| author=Haisch, Bernard; Rueda, Alfonso; and Dobyns, York |title=Inertial mass and the quantum vacuum fields |journal= Annalen Phys. | volume= 10 |year=2001 |pages = 393-414}}
*{{cite journal|author=Haisch, Bernard |title=Freeing The Scientific Imagination|journal=Noetic Sciences Review|volume=57|year=2001| pages=24}}
*{{cite journal| author=Haisch, Bernard; and Rueda, Alfonso |title=Gravity and the Quantum Vacuum Inertia Hypothesis |journal= Annalen Phys. | volume= 14 |year=2005 |pages = 479-498}}
*{{cite journal|author=Deardoff, J.; Haisch, B.; Puthoff, H. E. | title = Inflation-Theory Implications for Extraterrestrial Visitation | journal= J. British Interplanetary Soc. |year=2005 |volume=58 | pages=43-50}} from , Haisch's UFO website

A CV as well as a complete list of Haisch's publications is available at the .


==See also== ==Publications==
*{{Cite book|author=Haisch, Bernard|title=The God Theory: Universes, Zero-point Fields, And What's Behind It All|location=York Beach, ME|publisher=Red Wheel/Weiser Books|year=2006|isbn=1-57863-374-5|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/godtheoryunivers0000hais}}
* {{Cite journal |author1=Haisch, B. |author2=Strong, K.T. |author3=Rodono, M. | title=Flares on the Sun and other stars | journal = ] | volume = 29 | year = 1991 | pages = 275–324 | doi=10.1146/annurev.aa.29.090191.001423|bibcode = 1991ARA&A..29..275H }}
* {{Cite journal |author1=Haisch, B. |author2=Schmitt, J.H.M.M. |author3=Fabian, A.C. | title=Disappearance of coronal X-ray emission in stars with cool dense winds | journal = Nature | volume=360 | year=1992 | pages=239 | doi=10.1038/360239a0|bibcode = 1992Natur.360..239H | issue=6401| doi-access=free }}
* {{Cite journal |author1=Haisch, B. |author2=Antunes, A. |author3=Schmitt, J.H.M.M. | title=Solar-like M-class X-ray flares on Proxima Centauri observed by the ASCA satellite | journal = Science | volume=268 | year=1995 | pages=1327–9 | pmid=17778978 | doi=10.1126/science.268.5215.1327|bibcode = 1995Sci...268.1327H | issue=5215 |s2cid=46660210 }}
*{{Cite journal|author1=Haisch, B. |author2=Rueda, A. |author3=Puthoff, H. E. |title=Inertia as a zero-point-field Lorentz force |journal=Physical Review A|volume=49|year=1994|pages=678–694 |doi=10.1103/PhysRevA.49.678| pmid=9910287| issue=2|bibcode = 1994PhRvA..49..678H }}
*{{Cite journal|author1=Haisch, Bernard |author2=Rueda, Alfonso |title=Contribution to inertial mass by reaction of the vacuum to accelerated motion |journal=Found. Phys.| volume= 28 |year=1998 |pages = 1057–1108 |doi=10.1023/A:1018893903079| issue=7| arxiv=physics/9802030 |bibcode=1998physics...2030R |s2cid=15176550 }}
*{{Cite journal|author1=Haisch, Bernard |author2=Rueda, Alfonso |title=Toward an Interstellar Mission: Zeroing in on the Zero-Point-Field Inertia Resonance|arxiv=physics/9909043| date=21 September 1999|doi=10.1063/1.1290904|journal=AIP Conference Proceedings|volume=504 |pages=1047–1053 |s2cid=118870412 }}
*{{Cite journal|author1=Haisch, Bernard |author2=Rueda, Alfonso |author3=Dobyns, York |title=Inertial mass and the quantum vacuum fields |journal= Annalen der Physik | volume= 10 |year=2001 |pages = 393–414 |doi=10.1002/1521-3889(200105)10:5<393::AID-ANDP393>3.0.CO;2-Z|arxiv = gr-qc/0009036 |bibcode = 2001AnP...513..393H| issue=5 }}
*{{Cite journal|author=Haisch, Bernard |title=Freeing The Scientific Imagination|journal=Noetic Sciences Review|volume=57|year=2001| pages=24}}
*{{Cite journal|author1=Haisch, Bernard |author2=Rueda, Alfonso |title=Gravity and the Quantum Vacuum Inertia Hypothesis |journal= Annalen der Physik | volume= 14 |year=2005 |pages = 479–498 |doi=10.1002/andp.200510147|arxiv = gr-qc/0504061 |bibcode = 2005AnP...517..479R| issue=8 |s2cid=14283455 }}
*{{Cite journal|author1=Deardoff, J. |author2=Haisch, B. |author3=Puthoff, H. E. | title = Inflation-Theory Implications for Extraterrestrial Visitation | journal= Journal of the British Interplanetary Society |year=2005 |volume=58 | pages=43–50|bibcode = 2005JBIS...58...43D|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090916220126/http://www.ufoskeptic.org/JBIS.pdf}}


==References==
Related articles:
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==Further reading==
Related biographies:
{{Scholia}}
*], sometime coauthor of Haisch
*{{cite news|author=Haisch, Bernard|date=July 24, 2006|title=Why Wiki can drive you wacky|work=]|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2006-jul-24-oe-haisch24-story.html}}
*], sometime coauthor of Haisch


{{Authority control}}
==Notes==
<references />


] {{DEFAULTSORT:Haisch, Bernard}}
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Latest revision as of 15:01, 20 June 2024

German-born American astrophysicist
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.
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Bernard Michael Haisch is a German-born American astrophysicist who has researched solar-stellar astrophysics and stochastic electrodynamics. Haisch, with Alfonso Rueda, developed a speculative theory that the non-zero lowest energy state of the vacuum, as predicted by quantum mechanics, might provide a physical explanation for the origin of inertia, and might someday be used for spacecraft propulsion. Haisch has advocated the serious scientific study of phenomena outside the traditional scope of science and is known for his interest in UFO phenomena as well as a variety of other unorthodox topics.

Since 2002, Haisch has been involved with ManyOne Networks and related Digital Universe projects that aim to produce, among other things, a multimedia online encyclopedia. In 2006, Haisch published a popular book attempting to reconcile modern scientific belief with traditional religious belief. Haisch attributes his spiritual interests to his educational experience at the Latin School of Indianapolis (a high school affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church) and at the Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology.

Scientific career

Haisch was born in Stuttgart, Germany and earned a Ph.D. in astronomy from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1975 and thereafter spent three years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Haisch has worked at the Solar & Astrophysics Laboratory at Lockheed Martin in Palo Alto, California and as deputy director of the Center for Extreme Ultraviolet Astrophysics Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley. Haisch was a visiting scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany, and at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands. His primary research from the mid-1970s until the late 1990s was high energy astrophysics, specifically the ultraviolet and X-ray emissions from coronae and flares on the Sun and other late-type stars.

Haisch has published more than one hundred research papers on a variety of topics, many in journals such as Nature, Science, Physical Review, Astrophysical Journal, and Annalen der Physik. Haisch also edited the Astrophysical Journal for ten years.

In the 1990s, Haisch and Alfonso Rueda developed a "quantum vacuum inertia" hypothesis responsible for mass. The inertialess "SHARP drive" in Arthur C. Clarke's 3001: The Final Odyssey was named for Andrei Sakharov, Haisch, Rueda, and Harold E. Puthoff.

Haisch was editor-in-chief of the Journal of Scientific Exploration.

In addition to papers in mainstream journals and conference proceedings, Haisch also published papers in Science & Spirit magazine and the Journal of Noetic Sciences, a parapsychological journal published by the Institute of Noetic Sciences.

Other ventures

California Institute for Physics and Astrophysics

In 1999, Haisch founded the California Institute for Physics and Astrophysics in Palo Alto, California, an organization mainly devoted to studying the electromagnetic quantum vacuum and funded by private philanthropic money. The institute formerly employed five full-time physicists researching string theory, general relativity and stochastic electrodynamics. Haisch served as the institute's director from 1999 until 2002.

UFO Skeptic

Haisch created a website, UFO Skeptic, advocating professional scientists to investigate UFO phenomena.

Digital Universe

In 2002, Haisch became the Chief Science Officer of ManyOne Networks. Since 2004, he also served as president of the now defunct Digital Universe Foundation, which, among other things, aimed to create a peer-reviewed alternative to English Misplaced Pages, seeking to provide a comprehensive and reliable account of current mainstream scientific theory, evidence, and belief.

Publications

References

  1. "Bernard Michael Haisch". American Men & Women of Science. Gale. 2008.
  2. Haisch, Bernard. "Dear Colleagues". ufoskeptic.org.
  3. Matthews, Robert (February 4, 1994). "Inertia: Does Empty Space Put Up the Resistance?". Science. 263 (5147): 612–613. doi:10.1126/science.263.5147.612.
  4. Powell, Corey S. (May 1994). "Unbearable Lightness". Scientific American. Vol. 270, no. 5. pp. 27–28. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0594-27.
  5. Levin, Yefim S. (January 27, 2009). "Inertia as a zero-point-field force: Critical analysis of the Haisch-Rueda-Puthoff inertia theory". Physical Review A.
  6. Clarke, Arthur C. (1997). 3001: The Final Odyssey. pp. 64, 255–256.
  7. Gilster, Paul (2004). Centauri Dreams: Imagining and Planning Interstellar Exploration. p. 174.
  8. Haisch, Bernard; Sims, Marsha (2004). "A Retrospective on the Journal of Scientific Exploration" (PDF). Journal of Scientific Exploration. 18 (1).
  9. Keim, Brandon (March 2007). "News feature: WikiMedia". Nature Medicine. 13 (3). Nature Publishing Group.

Further reading

Scholia has a profile for Bernard Haisch (Q3638669). Categories: