This page should help you with any library research you need to do this summer. Feel free to contact me with questions. You may also want to try the UO Libraries LibX Toolbar for your browser!
Other pages you might want to bookmark:
Library Research Guides to Chemistry and Physics.
An interdisciplinary article citation database, heavy on science and technology,
covering over 13,000 journals, 1990 to present. It is most useful for citation
verification and making interlibrary loan requests directly from the database
Covers IEEE (Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers) journals, magazines, and conference proceedings, 1988 to present. Includes full-text access to journals (but not proceedings) from 1998-present. Good for nanotechnology, optics, semiconductors, information science, etc.
"The" search engine and databases for chemistry. The link above takes you to a place for downloading the special client software or registering for web access. Your temporary status probably does not authorize you for this, but if you have registered already at your home college or university, you should be okay for web access. It is also loaded on computers in the Science Library (from the start menu on the PCs, go to Programs). Only 2 UO users can be searching SciFinder at the same time.
Helps to locate reference books containing property data. Searchable by
property and type of material. The UO Science Library will have some,
but not all, of these books.
An open access NMR database for compound identification and support
for computer-assisted structure elucidation. Contains about 10,000 structures
and assigned spectra, with new datasets constantly added.
Do the articles have identified authors? Are the authors'
credentials and affiliations available? Do the articles have references
or bibliographies? If so, are there differences in the kinds of
references given?
Wikipedia is a very handy, free Internet source, but it is not
necessarily reliable. For a humorous demonstration of this phenomenon,
watch this excerpt of the Colbert Report on Comedy Central. (Some improvements have been made to Wikipedia since this segment aired.)
A searchable index of scholarly internet resource collections. Includes useful search limiters, such as type of resource, and whether resource if free or fee-based.
From the creator of Mathematica, a brand new kind of web engine that purports to be "the first step in an ambitious, long-term project to make all systematic knowledge immediately computable by anyone." It is very intriguing, but be careful to note the source of the data WolframAlpha is using in its computations.
ACS Style Guidelines
from Emily Wixson, U Wisconsin-Madison Chemistry Library. This guide is
very helpful, but for complete information, see the book above.
AIP Style Manual, 4th ed. This manual from American Institute of Physics is out of print (and there's nothing later available), and available free in pdf form on their web site.