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Archibald Hill

Archibald Vivian Hill CH OBE FRS[2] (26 September 1886 – 3 June 1977), known as A. V. Hill, was a British physiologist, one of the founders of the diverse disciplines of biophysics and operations research. He shared the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his elucidation of the production of heat and mechanical work in muscles.[3][4]

Archibald Vivian Hill
Born(1886-09-26)26 September 1886
Bristol, England
Died3 June 1977(1977-06-03) (aged 90)
Cambridge, England
NationalityBritish
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Known forMechanical work in muscles
Muscle contraction model
Founding biophysics
Hill equation (biochemistry)
SpouseMargaret Neville Keynes[1]
AwardsNobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1922)
Royal Medal (1926)
Actonian Prize (1928)
Copley Medal (1948)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysiology and biophysics
InstitutionsCambridge University
University of Manchester
University College, London
Academic advisorsWalter Morley Fletcher
Notable studentsTe-Pei Feng
Ralph H. Fowler
Bernard Katz
Notes
He is notably the father of Polly Hill, David Keynes Hill, Maurice Hill, and the grandfather of Nicholas Humphrey.

Biography

Born in Bristol, he was educated at Blundell's School and graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge as third wrangler in the mathematics tripos before turning to physiology. While still an undergraduate at Trinity College, he derived in 1909[5] what came to be known as the Langmuir equation.[6]

This is closely related to Michaelis-Menten kinetics. In this paper, Hill's first publication, he derived both the equilibrium form of the Langmuir equation, and also the exponential approach to equilibrium. The paper, written under the supervision of John Newport Langley, is a landmark in the history of receptor theory, because the context for the derivation was the binding of nicotine and curare to the "receptive substance" at the neuromuscular junction.[citation needed]

While a student he had enrolled in the Officers Training Corps; he was a crack shot. In 1914, at the outbreak of the First World War, Hill became the musketry officer of the Cambridgeshire Regiment. The British made no effort to make use of their scientists.[7][8]

At the end of 1915, while home on leave he was asked by Horace Darwin from the Ministry of Munitions to come for a day to advise them on how to train anti-aircraft gunners. On site, Hill immediately proposed a simple two mirror method to determine airplanes' heights. Transferred to Munitions, he realized that the mirrors could measure where smoke shells burst and if he fitted this data with the equations describing a shell's flight they could provide accurate range tables for anti-aircraft guns. To measure and compute he assembled the Anti-Aircraft Experimental Section, a team of men too old for conscription, Ralph H. Fowler (a wounded officer), and lads too young for service including Douglas Hartree, Arthur Milne and James Crowther. Someone dubbed his motley group "Hill's Brigands", which they proudly adopted. Later in the war they also worked on locating enemy planes from their sound. He sped between their working sites on his beloved motorcycle. At the end of the war Major Hill issued certificates to more than one hundred Brigands. He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE).[9]

In 1923 he succeeded Ernest Starling as professor of physiology at University College London, a few years later becoming a Royal Society Research professor there, where he remained until retirement in 1951. In 1933, he became with William Beveridge and Lord Rutherford a founder member and vice-president of the Academic Assistance Council (which in 1936 became the Society for the Protection of Science and Learning). By the start of the Second World War, the organisation had saved 900 academics (18 of whom went on to win Nobel Prizes) from Nazi persecution. He prominently displayed in his laboratory a toy figure of Adolf Hitler with saluting arm upraised, which he explained was in gratitude for all the scientists Germany had expelled, some of whom were now working with him.[10] Hill believed that "Laughter is the best detergent for nonsense".[11]

In 1935 he served with Patrick Blackett and Sir Henry Tizard on the committee that gave birth to radar. He was also biological secretary of the Royal Society; William Henry Bragg was president. Both had been frustrated by the delay in putting scientists to work in the previous war. The Royal Society collated a list of scientists and Hill represented the Society at the Ministry of Labour. When the war came Hill led a campaign to liberate refugee scientists who had been interned. He served as an independent Member of Parliament (MP) for Cambridge University from 1940 to 1945. In 1940 he was posted to the British Embassy in Washington to promote war research in the still neutral United States. He was authorized to swap secrets with the Americans, but this could not work: how do you place a value on another's secret? Hill saw the answer and persuaded the British to show the Americans everything they were working on (except for the atomic bomb). The mobilization of Allied scientists was one of the major successes in the war.[12]

After the war he rebuilt his laboratory at University College and vigorously carried on research.[13] In 1951 his advocacy was rewarded by the establishment of a Biophysics Department under his leadership.

In 1952, he became head of the British Association for the Advancement of Science and Secretary General of the International Council of Scientific Unions. He was President of the Marine Biological Association from 1955 to 1960. In 1967 he retired to Cambridge where he gradually lost the use of his legs. He died "held in the greatest affection by more than a hundred scientific descendants all over the world".[14]

Cooperativity of protein binding and enzyme kinetics

Although Hill's work in muscle physiology is probably the most important, and certainly responsible for his Nobel Prize, he is also very well known in biochemistry for the Hill equation, which is used to quantify binding of oxygen to haemoglobin, written here as a kinetic equation:[15]

 

Here   is the rate of reaction at concentration   of substrate,   is the rate at saturation,   is the value of   that gives  , and the exponent   is a parameter that expresses the degree of departure from Michaelis-Menten kinetics: positive cooperativity for  , no cooperativity for  , and negative cooperativity for  . Note that there is no implication that   is an integer, and in most experimental cases, apart from the trivial case of  , it is not. Although many authors use   or   rather than   these symbols are misleading if taken to imply that it shows the number of binding sites on the protein. Hill himself avoided any such interpretation.

The equation can be rearranged as follows:

 

This shows that when the Hill equation is accurately obeyed (which usually it is not) a plot of   gives a straight line of slope  . This is called a Hill plot.

Muscle physiology

Hill made many exacting measurements of the heat released when skeletal muscles contract and relax. A key finding was that heat is produced during contraction, which requires investment of chemical energy, but not during relaxation, which is passive.[16] His earliest measurements used equipment left behind by the Swedish physiologist Magnus Blix, Hill measured a temperature rise of only 0.003 °C. After publication he learned that German physiologists had already reported on heat and muscle contraction and he went to Germany to learn more about their work. He continually improved his apparatus to make it more sensitive and to reduce the time lag between the heat released by the preparation and its recording by his thermocouple.

Hill is regarded, along with Hermann Helmholtz, as one of the founders of biophysics.

Hill returned briefly to Cambridge in 1919 before taking the chair in physiology at the Victoria University of Manchester in 1920 in succession to William Stirling. Using himself as the subject —he ran every morning from 7:15 to 10:30 — he showed that running a dash relies on energy stores which afterwards are replenished by increased oxygen consumption. Paralleling the work of German Otto Fritz Meyerhof, Hill elucidated the processes whereby mechanical work is produced in muscles. The two shared the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for this work.[17] Hill introduced the concepts of maximal oxygen uptake and oxygen debt in 1922.[18][19]

Personal life

In 1913 he married Margaret Neville Keynes (1885-1974), daughter of the economist John Neville Keynes, and sister of the economist John Maynard Keynes and the surgeon Geoffrey Keynes. They had two sons and two daughters:

  • Polly Hill (1914–2005), economist, married K.A.C. Humphreys, registrar of the West African Examinations Council.
  • David Keynes Hill (1915–2002), physiologist, married Stella Mary Humphrey
  • Maurice Hill (1919–1966), oceanographer, married Philippa Pass
  • Janet Hill (1918–2000) child psychiatrist, married the immunologist John Herbert Humphrey.

Honors and awards

Blue plaque

 
Blue plaque at 16 Bishopswood Road, Highgate.

On 9 September 2015 an English Heritage Blue plaque was erected at Hill's former home, 16 Bishopswood Road, Highgate, where he had lived from 1923 to 1967. Since then the house had been divided into flats and owned by Highgate School, where Hill was a Governor from 1929 to 1960. It has now been sold, redeveloped and renamed as Hurstbourne. In Hill's time, according to his grandson Nicholas Humphrey, regular guests at the house included 18 exiled Nobel laureates, his brother-in-law, the economist John Maynard Keynes, and friends Stephen Hawking and Sigmund Freud. After-dinner conversations in the drawing room would inevitably involve passionate debates about science or politics. "Every Sunday we would have to attend a tea party at grandpa’s house and apart from entertaining some extraordinary guests, he would devise some great games for us, such as frog racing in the garden or looking through the lens of a (dissected) sheep’s eye". Sir Ralph Kohn FRS who proposed the Blue plaque, said: "The Nobel Prize winner A. V. Hill contributed vastly to our understanding of muscle physiology. His work has resulted in wide-ranging application in sports medicine. As an outstanding Humanitarian and Parliamentarian, he was uncompromising in his condemnation of the Nazi regime for its persecution of scientists and others. A. V. Hill played a crucial role in assisting and rescuing many refugees to continue their work in this country".[27][28][29]

Publications

By Hill:

  • Gray, C. H. (1947). "The significance of the van den Bergh reaction". The Quarterly Journal of Medicine. 16 (63): 135–142. PMID 20263725.
  • Hill, A. V.; Long, C. N. H.; Lupton, H. (1924). "Muscular Exercise, Lactic Acid, and the Supply and Utilisation of Oxygen". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 96 (679): 438–475. doi:10.1098/rspb.1924.0037.
  • Hill, A.V. (1924–25). Textbook of Anti-Aircraft Gunnery, 2 vols
  • Hill, A. V. (1926). "The scientific study of athletics". Scientific American. 224 (April) (4): 224–225. Bibcode:1926SciAm.134..224H. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0426-224.
  • Muscular Activity. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 1926a. ISBN 978-0-8493-5494-6.
  • Muscular Activity: Herter Lectures – Sixteenth Course. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins Company. 1926b.
  • - (1927a). Muscular Movement in Man
  • - (1927b). Living Machinery
  • Hill, A. V. (1928). "Myothermic apparatus". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 103 (723): 117–137. Bibcode:1928RSPSB.103..117H. doi:10.1098/rspb.1928.0029.
  • Adventures in Biophysics. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 1931.
  • - (1932) Chemical Wave Transmission in Nerve
  • The Ethical Dilemma of Science, and Other Writings. New York: Rockefeller Institute Press. 1960.
  • Trails and Trials in Physiology: A Bibliography, 1909–1964; with reviews of certain topics and methods and a reconnaissance for further research. London: Arnold. 1965.

References

  1. ^ Jain, C. "Spouse Details added". Archibald V. Hill Biographical.
  2. ^ Katz, B. (1978). "Archibald Vivian Hill. 26 September 1886 – 3 June 1977". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 24: 71–149. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1978.0005. JSTOR 769758. PMID 11615743. S2CID 46444782.
  3. ^ Bassett, DR Jr (2002). "Scientific contributions of A. V. Hill: exercise physiology pioneer". Journal of Applied Physiology. 93 (5): 1567–1582. doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.01246.2001. PMID 12381740. S2CID 14704104.
  4. ^ "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31230. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ Hill, A. V. (1909). "The mode of action of nicotine and curari, determined by the form of the contraction curve and the method of temperature coefficients". The Journal of Physiology. 39 (5): 361–373. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1909.sp001344. PMC 1533665. PMID 16992989.
  6. ^ Langmuir, Irving (June 1918). "The Adsorption of Gases on Plane Surface of Glass, Mica and Platinum". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 40 (9): 1361–1402. doi:10.1021/ja02242a004.
  7. ^ Van der Kloot, William (2011). "Mirrors and Smoke: A. V. HILL, His Brigands, and the Science of Anti-Aircraft Gunnery in World War I". Notes Rec. R. Soc. Lond. 25: 393–410.
  8. ^ Van der Kloot, William (2014). Great Scientists wage the Great War. Stroud: Fonthill. pp. 191–214.
  9. ^ Van der Kloot W (December 2011). "Mirrors and smoke: A. V. Hill, his Brigands, and the science of anti-aircraft gunnery in World War I". Notes Rec R Soc Lond. 65 (4): 393–410. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2010.0090. PMID 22332470.
  10. ^ Jean Medawar; David Pyke (2001). Hitler's gift: scientists who fled Nazi Germany. London: Piatkus. p. 122.
  11. ^ Van der Kloot 2014, p. 202.
  12. ^ Hastings, Max (2011). All Hell let loose: the World at War 1939-45. London: Harper. p. 81.
  13. ^ Hill, A. V. (1965). Trails and Trials in Physiology. London: Edward Arnold.
  14. ^ Katz 1978. p. 133.
  15. ^ Cornish-Bowden A (2012). Fundamentals of Enzyme Kinetics (4th edn.). Weinheim, Germany: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 286–288. ISBN 978-3-527-33074-4.
  16. ^ Katz, Bernard (1978). "Archibald Vivian Hill". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 24: 71–149. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1978.0005. PMID 11615743. S2CID 46444782.
  17. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1922".
  18. ^ Hale, Tudor (15 February 2008). "History of developments in sport and exercise physiology: A. V. Hill, maximal oxygen uptake, and oxygen debt". Journal of Sports Sciences. 26 (4): 365–400. doi:10.1080/02640410701701016. ISSN 0264-0414. PMID 18228167. S2CID 33768722.
  19. ^ Bassett, D. R.; Howley, E. T. (1997). "Maximal oxygen uptake: "classical" versus "contemporary" viewpoints". Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise. 29 (5): 591–603. doi:10.1097/00005768-199705000-00002. ISSN 0195-9131. PMID 9140894.
  20. ^ "Archibald Vivian Hill". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. 9 February 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  21. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  22. ^ "It may interest you to know". The Journal of Health and Physical Education. 9 (7): 449–451. 1938. doi:10.1080/23267240.1938.10619861.
  23. ^ Cardinal, Bradley J. (2022). "The National Academy of Kinesiology: Its founding, focus, and future". Kinesiology Review. 11 (1): 6–25. doi:10.1123/kr.2021-0064.
  24. ^ Scott, M. Gladys (1978). The Academy Papers. Washington, DC: American Academy of Physical Education and the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education and Recreation. pp. 63–65.
  25. ^ "Archibald Hill". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  26. ^ Presidential Address to the British Association Meeting, held at Belfast in 1952
  27. ^ "A.V.Hill, Nobel Prize Winner and Sports Medicine Pioneer, receives English Heritage Blue Plaque". Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  28. ^ Rowlinson, Liz (18 September 2015). "Houses stamped with a mark of prestige". Times online. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  29. ^ Jacoby, Charlie. "Famous homes in north London with many stories". The JC. Retrieved 3 June 2020.

Sources

  • Lusk, G. (1925). Lectures on nutrition: 1924–1925. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Company.
  • Medawar, Jean: Pyke, David (2012). Hitler's Gift: The True Story of the Scientists Expelled by the Nazi Regime (Paperback). New York: Arcade Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61145-709-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Stevenson, L.G. (1953). Nobel Prize Winners in Medicine and Physiology: 1901–1950. New York: Henry Schuman.
  • Archibald V. Hill on Nobelprize.org  

External links

archibald, hill, archibald, vivian, hill, september, 1886, june, 1977, known, hill, british, physiologist, founders, diverse, disciplines, biophysics, operations, research, shared, 1922, nobel, prize, physiology, medicine, elucidation, production, heat, mechan. Archibald Vivian Hill CH OBE FRS 2 26 September 1886 3 June 1977 known as A V Hill was a British physiologist one of the founders of the diverse disciplines of biophysics and operations research He shared the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his elucidation of the production of heat and mechanical work in muscles 3 4 Archibald Vivian HillBorn 1886 09 26 26 September 1886Bristol EnglandDied3 June 1977 1977 06 03 aged 90 Cambridge EnglandNationalityBritishAlma materTrinity College CambridgeKnown forMechanical work in muscles Muscle contraction model Founding biophysicsHill equation biochemistry SpouseMargaret Neville Keynes 1 AwardsNobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1922 Royal Medal 1926 Actonian Prize 1928 Copley Medal 1948 Scientific careerFieldsPhysiology and biophysicsInstitutionsCambridge University University of Manchester University College LondonAcademic advisorsWalter Morley FletcherNotable studentsTe Pei FengRalph H FowlerBernard KatzNotesHe is notably the father of Polly Hill David Keynes Hill Maurice Hill and the grandfather of Nicholas Humphrey Contents 1 Biography 2 Cooperativity of protein binding and enzyme kinetics 3 Muscle physiology 4 Personal life 5 Honors and awards 6 Blue plaque 7 Publications 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBiography EditBorn in Bristol he was educated at Blundell s School and graduated from Trinity College Cambridge as third wrangler in the mathematics tripos before turning to physiology While still an undergraduate at Trinity College he derived in 1909 5 what came to be known as the Langmuir equation 6 This is closely related to Michaelis Menten kinetics In this paper Hill s first publication he derived both the equilibrium form of the Langmuir equation and also the exponential approach to equilibrium The paper written under the supervision of John Newport Langley is a landmark in the history of receptor theory because the context for the derivation was the binding of nicotine and curare to the receptive substance at the neuromuscular junction citation needed While a student he had enrolled in the Officers Training Corps he was a crack shot In 1914 at the outbreak of the First World War Hill became the musketry officer of the Cambridgeshire Regiment The British made no effort to make use of their scientists 7 8 At the end of 1915 while home on leave he was asked by Horace Darwin from the Ministry of Munitions to come for a day to advise them on how to train anti aircraft gunners On site Hill immediately proposed a simple two mirror method to determine airplanes heights Transferred to Munitions he realized that the mirrors could measure where smoke shells burst and if he fitted this data with the equations describing a shell s flight they could provide accurate range tables for anti aircraft guns To measure and compute he assembled the Anti Aircraft Experimental Section a team of men too old for conscription Ralph H Fowler a wounded officer and lads too young for service including Douglas Hartree Arthur Milne and James Crowther Someone dubbed his motley group Hill s Brigands which they proudly adopted Later in the war they also worked on locating enemy planes from their sound He sped between their working sites on his beloved motorcycle At the end of the war Major Hill issued certificates to more than one hundred Brigands He was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE 9 In 1923 he succeeded Ernest Starling as professor of physiology at University College London a few years later becoming a Royal Society Research professor there where he remained until retirement in 1951 In 1933 he became with William Beveridge and Lord Rutherford a founder member and vice president of the Academic Assistance Council which in 1936 became the Society for the Protection of Science and Learning By the start of the Second World War the organisation had saved 900 academics 18 of whom went on to win Nobel Prizes from Nazi persecution He prominently displayed in his laboratory a toy figure of Adolf Hitler with saluting arm upraised which he explained was in gratitude for all the scientists Germany had expelled some of whom were now working with him 10 Hill believed that Laughter is the best detergent for nonsense 11 In 1935 he served with Patrick Blackett and Sir Henry Tizard on the committee that gave birth to radar He was also biological secretary of the Royal Society William Henry Bragg was president Both had been frustrated by the delay in putting scientists to work in the previous war The Royal Society collated a list of scientists and Hill represented the Society at the Ministry of Labour When the war came Hill led a campaign to liberate refugee scientists who had been interned He served as an independent Member of Parliament MP for Cambridge University from 1940 to 1945 In 1940 he was posted to the British Embassy in Washington to promote war research in the still neutral United States He was authorized to swap secrets with the Americans but this could not work how do you place a value on another s secret Hill saw the answer and persuaded the British to show the Americans everything they were working on except for the atomic bomb The mobilization of Allied scientists was one of the major successes in the war 12 After the war he rebuilt his laboratory at University College and vigorously carried on research 13 In 1951 his advocacy was rewarded by the establishment of a Biophysics Department under his leadership In 1952 he became head of the British Association for the Advancement of Science and Secretary General of the International Council of Scientific Unions He was President of the Marine Biological Association from 1955 to 1960 In 1967 he retired to Cambridge where he gradually lost the use of his legs He died held in the greatest affection by more than a hundred scientific descendants all over the world 14 Cooperativity of protein binding and enzyme kinetics EditAlthough Hill s work in muscle physiology is probably the most important and certainly responsible for his Nobel Prize he is also very well known in biochemistry for the Hill equation which is used to quantify binding of oxygen to haemoglobin written here as a kinetic equation 15 v V a h K 0 5 h a h displaystyle v V frac a h K 0 5 h a h Here v displaystyle v is the rate of reaction at concentration a displaystyle a of substrate V displaystyle V is the rate at saturation K 0 5 displaystyle K 0 5 is the value of a displaystyle a that gives v 0 5 V displaystyle v 0 5V and the exponent h displaystyle h is a parameter that expresses the degree of departure from Michaelis Menten kinetics positive cooperativity for h gt 1 displaystyle h gt 1 no cooperativity for h 1 displaystyle h 1 and negative cooperativity for h lt 1 displaystyle h lt 1 Note that there is no implication that h displaystyle h is an integer and in most experimental cases apart from the trivial case of h 1 displaystyle h 1 it is not Although many authors use h displaystyle h or n H displaystyle n mathrm H rather than h displaystyle h these symbols are misleading if taken to imply that it shows the number of binding sites on the protein Hill himself avoided any such interpretation The equation can be rearranged as follows ln v V v h ln a h ln K 0 5 displaystyle ln v V v h ln a h ln K 0 5 This shows that when the Hill equation is accurately obeyed which usually it is not a plot of ln v V v displaystyle ln v V v gives a straight line of slope h displaystyle h This is called a Hill plot Muscle physiology EditHill made many exacting measurements of the heat released when skeletal muscles contract and relax A key finding was that heat is produced during contraction which requires investment of chemical energy but not during relaxation which is passive 16 His earliest measurements used equipment left behind by the Swedish physiologist Magnus Blix Hill measured a temperature rise of only 0 003 C After publication he learned that German physiologists had already reported on heat and muscle contraction and he went to Germany to learn more about their work He continually improved his apparatus to make it more sensitive and to reduce the time lag between the heat released by the preparation and its recording by his thermocouple Hill is regarded along with Hermann Helmholtz as one of the founders of biophysics Hill returned briefly to Cambridge in 1919 before taking the chair in physiology at the Victoria University of Manchester in 1920 in succession to William Stirling Using himself as the subject he ran every morning from 7 15 to 10 30 he showed that running a dash relies on energy stores which afterwards are replenished by increased oxygen consumption Paralleling the work of German Otto Fritz Meyerhof Hill elucidated the processes whereby mechanical work is produced in muscles The two shared the 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for this work 17 Hill introduced the concepts of maximal oxygen uptake and oxygen debt in 1922 18 19 Personal life EditIn 1913 he married Margaret Neville Keynes 1885 1974 daughter of the economist John Neville Keynes and sister of the economist John Maynard Keynes and the surgeon Geoffrey Keynes They had two sons and two daughters Polly Hill 1914 2005 economist married K A C Humphreys registrar of the West African Examinations Council David Keynes Hill 1915 2002 physiologist married Stella Mary Humphrey Maurice Hill 1919 1966 oceanographer married Philippa Pass Janet Hill 1918 2000 child psychiatrist married the immunologist John Herbert Humphrey Honors and awards EditOfficer of the Order of the British Empire 1918 Fellow of the Royal Society 1918 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1922 In 1926 he was invited to deliver the Royal Institution Christmas Lecture on Nerves and Muscles How We Feel and Move International Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1934 20 International Member of the American Philosophical Society 1938 21 Associate Fellow in the National Academy of Kinesiology 1938 22 23 24 International Member of the United States National Academy of Sciences 1941 25 Companion of Honour 1946 Copley Medal of the Royal Society 1948 President of the British Association 1952 26 Blue plaque Edit Blue plaque at 16 Bishopswood Road Highgate On 9 September 2015 an English Heritage Blue plaque was erected at Hill s former home 16 Bishopswood Road Highgate where he had lived from 1923 to 1967 Since then the house had been divided into flats and owned by Highgate School where Hill was a Governor from 1929 to 1960 It has now been sold redeveloped and renamed as Hurstbourne In Hill s time according to his grandson Nicholas Humphrey regular guests at the house included 18 exiled Nobel laureates his brother in law the economist John Maynard Keynes and friends Stephen Hawking and Sigmund Freud After dinner conversations in the drawing room would inevitably involve passionate debates about science or politics Every Sunday we would have to attend a tea party at grandpa s house and apart from entertaining some extraordinary guests he would devise some great games for us such as frog racing in the garden or looking through the lens of a dissected sheep s eye Sir Ralph Kohn FRS who proposed the Blue plaque said The Nobel Prize winner A V Hill contributed vastly to our understanding of muscle physiology His work has resulted in wide ranging application in sports medicine As an outstanding Humanitarian and Parliamentarian he was uncompromising in his condemnation of the Nazi regime for its persecution of scientists and others A V Hill played a crucial role in assisting and rescuing many refugees to continue their work in this country 27 28 29 Publications EditBy Hill Gray C H 1947 The significance of the van den Bergh reaction The Quarterly Journal of Medicine 16 63 135 142 PMID 20263725 Hill A V Long C N H Lupton H 1924 Muscular Exercise Lactic Acid and the Supply and Utilisation of Oxygen Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 96 679 438 475 doi 10 1098 rspb 1924 0037 Hill A V 1924 25 Textbook of Anti Aircraft Gunnery 2 vols Hill A V 1926 The scientific study of athletics Scientific American 224 April 4 224 225 Bibcode 1926SciAm 134 224H doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0426 224 Muscular Activity Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 1926a ISBN 978 0 8493 5494 6 Muscular Activity Herter Lectures Sixteenth Course Baltimore Williams amp Wilkins Company 1926b 1927a Muscular Movement in Man 1927b Living Machinery Hill A V 1928 Myothermic apparatus Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 103 723 117 137 Bibcode 1928RSPSB 103 117H doi 10 1098 rspb 1928 0029 Adventures in Biophysics Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 1931 1932 Chemical Wave Transmission in Nerve The Ethical Dilemma of Science and Other Writings New York Rockefeller Institute Press 1960 Trails and Trials in Physiology A Bibliography 1909 1964 with reviews of certain topics and methods and a reconnaissance for further research London Arnold 1965 References Edit Jain C Spouse Details added Archibald V Hill Biographical Katz B 1978 Archibald Vivian Hill 26 September 1886 3 June 1977 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 24 71 149 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1978 0005 JSTOR 769758 PMID 11615743 S2CID 46444782 Bassett DR Jr 2002 Scientific contributions of A V Hill exercise physiology pioneer Journal of Applied Physiology 93 5 1567 1582 doi 10 1152 japplphysiol 01246 2001 PMID 12381740 S2CID 14704104 The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31230 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hill A V 1909 The mode of action of nicotine and curari determined by the form of the contraction curve and the method of temperature coefficients The Journal of Physiology 39 5 361 373 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1909 sp001344 PMC 1533665 PMID 16992989 Langmuir Irving June 1918 The Adsorption of Gases on Plane Surface of Glass Mica and Platinum Journal of the American Chemical Society 40 9 1361 1402 doi 10 1021 ja02242a004 Van der Kloot William 2011 Mirrors and Smoke A V HILL His Brigands and the Science of Anti Aircraft Gunnery in World War I Notes Rec R Soc Lond 25 393 410 Van der Kloot William 2014 Great Scientists wage the Great War Stroud Fonthill pp 191 214 Van der Kloot W December 2011 Mirrors and smoke A V Hill his Brigands and the science of anti aircraft gunnery in World War I Notes Rec R Soc Lond 65 4 393 410 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2010 0090 PMID 22332470 Jean Medawar David Pyke 2001 Hitler s gift scientists who fled Nazi Germany London Piatkus p 122 Van der Kloot 2014 p 202 Hastings Max 2011 All Hell let loose the World at War 1939 45 London Harper p 81 Hill A V 1965 Trails and Trials in Physiology London Edward Arnold Katz 1978 p 133 Cornish Bowden A 2012 Fundamentals of Enzyme Kinetics 4th edn Weinheim Germany Wiley Blackwell pp 286 288 ISBN 978 3 527 33074 4 Katz Bernard 1978 Archibald Vivian Hill Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 24 71 149 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1978 0005 PMID 11615743 S2CID 46444782 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1922 Hale Tudor 15 February 2008 History of developments in sport and exercise physiology A V Hill maximal oxygen uptake and oxygen debt Journal of Sports Sciences 26 4 365 400 doi 10 1080 02640410701701016 ISSN 0264 0414 PMID 18228167 S2CID 33768722 Bassett D R Howley E T 1997 Maximal oxygen uptake classical versus contemporary viewpoints Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 29 5 591 603 doi 10 1097 00005768 199705000 00002 ISSN 0195 9131 PMID 9140894 Archibald Vivian Hill American Academy of Arts amp Sciences 9 February 2023 Retrieved 15 May 2023 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 15 May 2023 It may interest you to know The Journal of Health and Physical Education 9 7 449 451 1938 doi 10 1080 23267240 1938 10619861 Cardinal Bradley J 2022 The National Academy of Kinesiology Its founding focus and future Kinesiology Review 11 1 6 25 doi 10 1123 kr 2021 0064 Scott M Gladys 1978 The Academy Papers Washington DC American Academy of Physical Education and the American Alliance for Health Physical Education and Recreation pp 63 65 Archibald Hill www nasonline org Retrieved 15 May 2023 Presidential Address to the British Association Meeting held at Belfast in 1952 A V Hill Nobel Prize Winner and Sports Medicine Pioneer receives English Heritage Blue Plaque Retrieved 8 October 2015 Rowlinson Liz 18 September 2015 Houses stamped with a mark of prestige Times online Retrieved 8 October 2015 Jacoby Charlie Famous homes in north London with many stories The JC Retrieved 3 June 2020 Sources EditLusk G 1925 Lectures on nutrition 1924 1925 Philadelphia W B Saunders Company Medawar Jean Pyke David 2012 Hitler s Gift The True Story of the Scientists Expelled by the Nazi Regime Paperback New York Arcade Publishing ISBN 978 1 61145 709 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Stevenson L G 1953 Nobel Prize Winners in Medicine and Physiology 1901 1950 New York Henry Schuman Archibald V Hill on Nobelprize org Wikiquote has quotations related to Archibald Hill Parliament of the United KingdomPreceded bySir Kenneth Pickthorn Bt Sir John Withers Member of Parliament for Cambridge University1940 1945 With Sir Kenneth Pickthorn Bt Succeeded bySir Kenneth Pickthorn Bt Wilson HarrisExternal links EditThe Papers of A V Hill held at Churchill Archives Centre Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archibald Hill amp oldid 1170374878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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