Lord
Kelvin
(william thomson)
1824-1907
Lord
Kelvin (William Thomson) was one of the founders of modern physics,
probably the greatest applied scientist of the Victorian era.
He
became a student at Glasgow University when only 11 years old,
and later became Professor of Natural Philosophy there - a position
he held for 50 years. He was offered, and declined, the Cavendish
Chair at Cambridge three times, but instead persuaded all the
major scientists of the time to come to Glasgow.
Kelvin
had an excellent grasp of all aspects of physics: heat, light,
sound, electricity. In his early days he performed experiments
in electric lighting, thermodynamics and electrodynamics. He
studied radioactivity, and encouraged the Curies in their experiments
with radium.
He
was a very talented scientific insturment designer, and later
became associated with James White's company (founded in 1849),
when he realised many of the instruments he was devising in
the laboratory could be adapted for manufacture. Early on, they
made rangefinders for Professors Barr and Stroud (who had formed
a company, Barr and Stroud, in response to an advert for an
efficient rangefinder placed by the War Office in 1888).
It
was Kelvin's involvement in submarine telegraphy, and the laying
of the first transatlantic telegraph cable in 1866, which made
him internationally famous however, as well as his redesigned
nautical compass and sounding equipment
He
had his own steam yacht (the Lalla Rookh), on which he held
many social events as well as a number of scientific inquiries.
Lord
Kelvin died in 1907, aged 83.
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