Charles
T. R. Wilson
1869 - 1959
Charles
T.R. Wilson was the eighth child of a sheep farmer at Glencorse
in the Pentland Hills near Edinburgh. His father died when he
was 4, and whole family moved to Manchester to be nearer the
grandparents. Charles was sent to school by his older brothers,
but no science was taught. He collected beetles and pond life
with his brother, and was given a microsope when he was 13 -
this was the start of his scientific career. He studied as a
medical student at Manchester in 1884, then as a physicist at
Cambridge.
The cloud chamber was invented by: Charles T R Wilson in 1896.
The cloud chamber was a method of tracking alpha-particles and
electrons which allowed the movement of atoms to be recorded
on film. This was Charles T R Wilsons greatest achievement,
winning him the Nobel prize for Physics in 1927.
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