Astronomy Many famous
astronomical surveys were taken using photographic plates, including the first
Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (
POSS) of the 1950s, the follow-up POSS-II survey of the 1990s, and the UK
Schmidt Telescope survey of southern
declinations. A number of
observatories, including
Harvard College and
Sonneberg, maintain large
archives of photographic plates, which are used primarily for historical research on
variable stars. Many solar system objects were discovered by using photographic plates, superseding earlier visual methods. Discovery of
minor planets using photographic plates was pioneered by
Max Wolf beginning with his discovery of
323 Brucia in 1891. The first
natural satellite discovered using photographic plates was
Phoebe in 1898.
Pluto was discovered using photographic plates in a
blink comparator; its moon
Charon was discovered 48 years later in 1978 by
U.S. Naval Observatory astronomer
James W. Christy by carefully examining a bulge in Pluto's image on a photographic plate. Glass-base plates, rather than film, were generally used in astronomy because they do not shrink or deform noticeably in the development process or under environmental changes. Several important applications of
astrophotography, including
astronomical spectroscopy and
astrometry, continued using plates until
digital imaging improved to the point where it could outmatch photographic results.
Kodak and other manufacturers discontinued production of most kinds of plates as the market for them dwindled between 1980 and 2000, terminating most remaining astronomical use, including for sky surveys.
Physics Photographic plates were also an important tool in early
high-energy physics, as they are blackened by
ionizing radiation.
Ernest Rutherford was one of the first to study the absorption, in various materials, of the rays produced in
radioactive decay, by using photographic plates to measure the intensity of the rays. Development of particle detection optimised
nuclear emulsions in the 1930s and 1940s, first in physics laboratories, then by commercial manufacturers, enabled the discovery and measurement of both the
pi-meson and
K-meson, in 1947 and 1949, initiating a flood of new particle discoveries in the second half of the 20th century.
Electron microscopy Photographic emulsions were originally coated on thin glass plates for imaging with
electron microscopes, which provided a more rigid, stable and flatter plane compared to plastic films. Beginning in the 1970s, high-contrast, fine grain emulsions coated on thicker plastic films manufactured by Kodak, Ilford and DuPont replaced glass plates. These films have largely been replaced by digital imaging technologies. == Medical imaging ==