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Charles Thomson Rees Wilson

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, CH, FRS[1] (14 February 1869 – 15 November 1959) was a Scottish physicist and meteorologist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his invention of the cloud chamber.[2][3]

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Wilson in 1927
Born(1869-02-14)14 February 1869
Glencorse, Scotland
Died15 November 1959(1959-11-15) (aged 90)
Carlops, Scotland
Alma mater
Known for
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsSidney Sussex College, Cambridge
Academic advisorsJ. J. Thomson
Doctoral students

Education and early life edit

Wilson was born in the parish of Glencorse, Midlothian to Annie Clark Harper and John Wilson, a sheep farmer. After his father died in 1873, he moved with his family to Manchester. With financial support from his step-brother he studied biology at Owens College, now the University of Manchester, with the intent of becoming a doctor. In 1887, he graduated from the college with a BSc. He won a scholarship to attend Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he became interested in physics and chemistry. In 1892 he received 1st class honours in both parts of the Natural Science Tripos.[4][5][6]

Career edit

He became particularly interested in meteorology, and in 1893 he began to study clouds and their properties. Beginning in 1894, he worked for some time at the observatory on Ben Nevis,[7] where he made observations of cloud formation. He was particularly fascinated by the appearance of glories.[8] He then tried to reproduce this effect on a smaller scale at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, expanding humid air within a sealed container. He later experimented with the creation of cloud trails in his chamber by condensation onto ions generated by radioactivity. Several of his cloud chambers survive.[9]

Wilson was made Fellow of Sidney Sussex College, and University Lecturer and Demonstrator in 1900.[3] He was known by some as a poor lecturer, due to a pronounced stutter,[10] but he did teach a course on atmospheric electricity as a visiting lecturer at Imperial College London.[11]

Contributions edit

The invention of the cloud chamber was by far Wilson's signature accomplishment, earning him the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1927.[6] The Cavendish laboratory praised him for the creation of "a novel and striking method of investigating the properties of ionized gases".[12] The cloud chamber allowed huge experimental leaps forward in the study of subatomic particles and the field of particle physics, generally. Some have credited Wilson with making the study of particles possible at all.[8]

 
Commemorative plaque at Ben Nevis about the observatory there, and C.T.R. Wilson's cloud chamber

Wilson published numerous papers on meteorology and physics, on topics including X-rays,[13] ionization,[14] thundercloud formation,[15] and other meteorological events.[8] Wilson may also have observed a sprite in 1924, 65 years before their official discovery.[16] Weather was a focus of his work throughout his career, from his early observations at Ben Nevis to his final paper, on thunderclouds.[17][15]

Method edit

Retrospectively, Wilson's experimental method has received some attention from scholars.

In a period of scientific inquiry characterized by a divide between "analytical" and "morphological" scientists, Wilson's method of inquiry represented a hybrid. While some scientists believed phenomena should be observed in pure nature, others proposed laboratory-controlled experiments as the premier method for inquiry. Wilson used a combination of methods in his experiments and investigations.[18] Wilson's work "made things visible whose properties had only previously been deduced indirectly".[8]

He has been called "almost the last of the great individual experimenters in physics".[10] He used his cloud chamber in various ways to demonstrate the operating principles of things like subatomic particles and X-rays.[13][14] But his primary interest, and the subject of the bulk of his papers, was meteorology.[18]

Awards, honours and legacy edit

Wilson was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1900.[1]

 
The original cloud chamber of C.T.R. Wilson
 
Wilson's Cloud Chamber at AEC's Brookhaven National Laboratory

For the invention of the cloud chamber he received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1927.[8][6] He shared this prize with the American physicist Arthur Compton, rewarded for his work on the particle nature of radiation.[17] Despite Wilson's great contribution to particle physics, he remained interested in atmospheric physics, specifically atmospheric electricity, for his entire career.[19][20] For example, his last research paper, published in 1956 when he was in his late eighties (at that time he was the oldest FRS to publish a paper in the Royal Society's journals), was on atmospheric electricity.[15]

The Wilson crater on the Moon is named after him, Alexander Wilson and Ralph Elmer Wilson.[21] The Wilson Condensation Cloud formations that occur after large explosions, such as nuclear detonations, are named after him.[22] The Wilson Society, the scientific society of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge is named in his honour,[23] as is the CTR Wilson Institute for Atmospheric Electricity, the Atmospheric Electricity Special Interest Group of the Royal Meteorological Society.

The archives of C.T.R. Wilson are maintained by the Archives of the University of Glasgow.[24]

In 2012, the Royal Society of Edinburgh held a meeting in honour of Wilson, the "Great Scottish Physicist".[20]

Personal life edit

In 1908, Wilson married Jessie Fraser, the daughter of a minister from Glasgow. The couple had four children. His family knew him as patient and curious, and fond of taking walks in the hills near his home.[16] He died at his home in Carlops on 15 November 1959, surrounded by his family.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Blackett, P. M. S. (1960). "Charles Thomson Rees Wilson 1869–1959". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 6: 269–295. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1960.0037. S2CID 73384198.
  2. ^ Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, Isaac Asimov, 2nd ed., Doubleday & C., Inc., ISBN 0-385-17771-2.
  3. ^ a b Charles Thomson Rees Wilson's biography
  4. ^ a b Longair, Malcolm S. (2006). "Wilson, Charles Thomson Rees (1869–1959)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36950. Retrieved 28 January 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ "Wilson, Charles Thomson Rees (WL888CT)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  6. ^ a b c "C.T.R. Wilson - Biographical". Nobelprize.org. Nobel Media AB. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  7. ^ Williams, Earle R. (1 August 2010). "Origin and context of C. T. R. Wilson's ideas on electron runaway in thunderclouds". Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 115 (A8): A00E50. Bibcode:2010JGRA..115.0E50W. doi:10.1029/2009JA014581. ISSN 2156-2202.
  8. ^ a b c d e Brocklehurst, Steven (7 December 2012). "Charles Thomson Rees Wilson: The man who made clouds". BBC News. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  9. ^ Phillipson, Tacye (December 2016). "Surviving Apparatus Showing the Early Development of the Cloud Chamber". Bulletin of the Scientific Instrument Society.
  10. ^ a b Halliday, E.C. (1970). "Some Memories of Prof. C.T.R. Wilson, English Pioneer in work on Thunderstorms and Lightning". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 51 (12): 1133–1135. Bibcode:1970BAMS...51.1133H. doi:10.1175/1520-0477(1970)051<1133:smopct>2.0.co;2.
  11. ^ Toumi, Ralf (April 2021). "100 Years of meteorology at Imperial College". Weather. 76 (4): 119–119. doi:10.1002/wea.3951. ISSN 0043-1656.
  12. ^ A history of the Cavendish laboratory 1871–1910.With 3 portraits in a collotype and 8 other illustrations. London. 1910. hdl:2027/coo1.ark:/13960/t0ns19f2h.
  13. ^ a b Wilson, C. T. R. (1 August 1923). "Investigations on X-Rays and $ \beta $-Rays by the Cloud Method. Part I. X-Rays". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 104 (724): 1–24. Bibcode:1923RSPSA.104....1W. doi:10.1098/rspa.1923.0090. ISSN 1364-5021.
  14. ^ a b Wilson, C. T. R. (9 June 1911). "On a Method of Making Visible the Paths of Ionising Particles through a Gas". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 85 (578): 285–288. Bibcode:1911RSPSA..85..285W. doi:10.1098/rspa.1911.0041. ISSN 1364-5021.
  15. ^ a b c Wilson, C. T. R. (2 August 1956). "A Theory of Thundercloud Electricity". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 236 (1206): 297–317. Bibcode:1956RSPSA.236..297W. doi:10.1098/rspa.1956.0137. ISSN 1364-5021. S2CID 98637297.
  16. ^ a b Bowler, Sue (7 December 2012). "C T R Wilson, a Great Scottish Physicist: His Life, Work and Legacy" (PDF).
  17. ^ a b "C. T. R. Wilson". Physics Today. 2017. doi:10.1063/pt.5.031417.
  18. ^ a b Gooding, David; Pinch, Trevor; Schaffer, Simon (18 May 1989). The Uses of Experiment: Studies in the Natural Sciences. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521337687.
  19. ^ Harrison, Giles (1 October 2011). "The cloud chamber and CTR Wilson's legacy to atmospheric science" (PDF). Weather. 66 (10): 276–279. Bibcode:2011Wthr...66..276H. doi:10.1002/wea.830. ISSN 1477-8696. S2CID 2428610.
  20. ^ a b Aplin, Karen L. (1 April 2013). "CTR Wilson – Honouring a Great Scottish Physicist". Weather. 68 (4): 96. Bibcode:2013Wthr...68...96A. doi:10.1002/wea.2095. ISSN 1477-8696.
  21. ^ "Planetary Names: Crater, craters: Wilson on Moon". planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  22. ^ Glasstone, Samuel; Dolan, Philip J., eds. (1977). The effects of nuclear weapons (3rd ed.). Washington: U.S. Department of Defense. p. 45. hdl:2027/uc1.31822004829784.
  23. ^ "About | Wilson Society". www.srcf.ucam.org. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  24. ^ "Papers of Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 1869–1959, Nobel Prize winner and Professor of Natural Philosophy, University of Cambridge – Archives Hub". Retrieved 28 January 2017.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Charles Thomson Rees Wilson at Wikimedia Commons
  • C.T.R. Wilson on Nobelprize.org  
  • The Papers of C. T. R. Wilson held at Churchill Archives Centre
Academic offices
Preceded by Jacksonian Professor of Natural Philosophy
1875–1923
Succeeded by

charles, thomson, rees, wilson, other, people, named, charles, wilson, charles, wilson, disambiguation, february, 1869, november, 1959, scottish, physicist, meteorologist, nobel, prize, physics, invention, cloud, chamber, frswilson, 1927born, 1869, february, 1. For other people named Charles Wilson see Charles Wilson disambiguation Charles Thomson Rees Wilson CH FRS 1 14 February 1869 15 November 1959 was a Scottish physicist and meteorologist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his invention of the cloud chamber 2 3 Charles Thomson Rees WilsonCH FRSWilson in 1927Born 1869 02 14 14 February 1869Glencorse ScotlandDied15 November 1959 1959 11 15 aged 90 Carlops ScotlandAlma materOwens CollegeSidney Sussex College CambridgeKnown forCloud chamberAtmospheric electricityAwardsRoyal Medal 1922 Howard N Potts Medal 1925 FRS 1900 Nobel Prize in Physics 1927 Franklin Medal 1929 Duddell Medal and Prize 1931 Scientific careerFieldsPhysicsInstitutionsSidney Sussex College CambridgeAcademic advisorsJ J ThomsonDoctoral studentsCecil Frank PowellPhilip Dee Contents 1 Education and early life 2 Career 3 Contributions 4 Method 5 Awards honours and legacy 6 Personal life 7 References 8 External linksEducation and early life editWilson was born in the parish of Glencorse Midlothian to Annie Clark Harper and John Wilson a sheep farmer After his father died in 1873 he moved with his family to Manchester With financial support from his step brother he studied biology at Owens College now the University of Manchester with the intent of becoming a doctor In 1887 he graduated from the college with a BSc He won a scholarship to attend Sidney Sussex College Cambridge where he became interested in physics and chemistry In 1892 he received 1st class honours in both parts of the Natural Science Tripos 4 5 6 Career editHe became particularly interested in meteorology and in 1893 he began to study clouds and their properties Beginning in 1894 he worked for some time at the observatory on Ben Nevis 7 where he made observations of cloud formation He was particularly fascinated by the appearance of glories 8 He then tried to reproduce this effect on a smaller scale at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge expanding humid air within a sealed container He later experimented with the creation of cloud trails in his chamber by condensation onto ions generated by radioactivity Several of his cloud chambers survive 9 Wilson was made Fellow of Sidney Sussex College and University Lecturer and Demonstrator in 1900 3 He was known by some as a poor lecturer due to a pronounced stutter 10 but he did teach a course on atmospheric electricity as a visiting lecturer at Imperial College London 11 Contributions editThe invention of the cloud chamber was by far Wilson s signature accomplishment earning him the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1927 6 The Cavendish laboratory praised him for the creation of a novel and striking method of investigating the properties of ionized gases 12 The cloud chamber allowed huge experimental leaps forward in the study of subatomic particles and the field of particle physics generally Some have credited Wilson with making the study of particles possible at all 8 nbsp Commemorative plaque at Ben Nevis about the observatory there and C T R Wilson s cloud chamber Wilson published numerous papers on meteorology and physics on topics including X rays 13 ionization 14 thundercloud formation 15 and other meteorological events 8 Wilson may also have observed a sprite in 1924 65 years before their official discovery 16 Weather was a focus of his work throughout his career from his early observations at Ben Nevis to his final paper on thunderclouds 17 15 Method editRetrospectively Wilson s experimental method has received some attention from scholars In a period of scientific inquiry characterized by a divide between analytical and morphological scientists Wilson s method of inquiry represented a hybrid While some scientists believed phenomena should be observed in pure nature others proposed laboratory controlled experiments as the premier method for inquiry Wilson used a combination of methods in his experiments and investigations 18 Wilson s work made things visible whose properties had only previously been deduced indirectly 8 He has been called almost the last of the great individual experimenters in physics 10 He used his cloud chamber in various ways to demonstrate the operating principles of things like subatomic particles and X rays 13 14 But his primary interest and the subject of the bulk of his papers was meteorology 18 Awards honours and legacy editWilson was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society FRS in 1900 1 nbsp The original cloud chamber of C T R Wilson nbsp Wilson s Cloud Chamber at AEC s Brookhaven National Laboratory For the invention of the cloud chamber he received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1927 8 6 He shared this prize with the American physicist Arthur Compton rewarded for his work on the particle nature of radiation 17 Despite Wilson s great contribution to particle physics he remained interested in atmospheric physics specifically atmospheric electricity for his entire career 19 20 For example his last research paper published in 1956 when he was in his late eighties at that time he was the oldest FRS to publish a paper in the Royal Society s journals was on atmospheric electricity 15 The Wilson crater on the Moon is named after him Alexander Wilson and Ralph Elmer Wilson 21 The Wilson Condensation Cloud formations that occur after large explosions such as nuclear detonations are named after him 22 The Wilson Society the scientific society of Sidney Sussex College Cambridge is named in his honour 23 as is the CTR Wilson Institute for Atmospheric Electricity the Atmospheric Electricity Special Interest Group of the Royal Meteorological Society The archives of C T R Wilson are maintained by the Archives of the University of Glasgow 24 In 2012 the Royal Society of Edinburgh held a meeting in honour of Wilson the Great Scottish Physicist 20 Personal life editIn 1908 Wilson married Jessie Fraser the daughter of a minister from Glasgow The couple had four children His family knew him as patient and curious and fond of taking walks in the hills near his home 16 He died at his home in Carlops on 15 November 1959 surrounded by his family 4 References edit a b Blackett P M S 1960 Charles Thomson Rees Wilson 1869 1959 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 6 269 295 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1960 0037 S2CID 73384198 Asimov s Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology Isaac Asimov 2nd ed Doubleday amp C Inc ISBN 0 385 17771 2 a b Charles Thomson Rees Wilson s biography a b Longair Malcolm S 2006 Wilson Charles Thomson Rees 1869 1959 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36950 Retrieved 28 January 2017 Subscription or UK public library membership required Wilson Charles Thomson Rees WL888CT A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c C T R Wilson Biographical Nobelprize org Nobel Media AB Retrieved 28 January 2017 Williams Earle R 1 August 2010 Origin and context of C T R Wilson s ideas on electron runaway in thunderclouds Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics 115 A8 A00E50 Bibcode 2010JGRA 115 0E50W doi 10 1029 2009JA014581 ISSN 2156 2202 a b c d e Brocklehurst Steven 7 December 2012 Charles Thomson Rees Wilson The man who made clouds BBC News Retrieved 8 June 2017 Phillipson Tacye December 2016 Surviving Apparatus Showing the Early Development of the Cloud Chamber Bulletin of the Scientific Instrument Society a b Halliday E C 1970 Some Memories of Prof C T R Wilson English Pioneer in work on Thunderstorms and Lightning Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 51 12 1133 1135 Bibcode 1970BAMS 51 1133H doi 10 1175 1520 0477 1970 051 lt 1133 smopct gt 2 0 co 2 Toumi Ralf April 2021 100 Years of meteorology at Imperial College Weather 76 4 119 119 doi 10 1002 wea 3951 ISSN 0043 1656 A history of the Cavendish laboratory 1871 1910 With 3 portraits in a collotype and 8 other illustrations London 1910 hdl 2027 coo1 ark 13960 t0ns19f2h a b Wilson C T R 1 August 1923 Investigations on X Rays and beta Rays by the Cloud Method Part I X Rays Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 104 724 1 24 Bibcode 1923RSPSA 104 1W doi 10 1098 rspa 1923 0090 ISSN 1364 5021 a b Wilson C T R 9 June 1911 On a Method of Making Visible the Paths of Ionising Particles through a Gas Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 85 578 285 288 Bibcode 1911RSPSA 85 285W doi 10 1098 rspa 1911 0041 ISSN 1364 5021 a b c Wilson C T R 2 August 1956 A Theory of Thundercloud Electricity Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 236 1206 297 317 Bibcode 1956RSPSA 236 297W doi 10 1098 rspa 1956 0137 ISSN 1364 5021 S2CID 98637297 a b Bowler Sue 7 December 2012 C T R Wilson a Great Scottish Physicist His Life Work and Legacy PDF a b C T R Wilson Physics Today 2017 doi 10 1063 pt 5 031417 a b Gooding David Pinch Trevor Schaffer Simon 18 May 1989 The Uses of Experiment Studies in the Natural Sciences Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521337687 Harrison Giles 1 October 2011 The cloud chamber and CTR Wilson s legacy to atmospheric science PDF Weather 66 10 276 279 Bibcode 2011Wthr 66 276H doi 10 1002 wea 830 ISSN 1477 8696 S2CID 2428610 a b Aplin Karen L 1 April 2013 CTR Wilson Honouring a Great Scottish Physicist Weather 68 4 96 Bibcode 2013Wthr 68 96A doi 10 1002 wea 2095 ISSN 1477 8696 Planetary Names Crater craters Wilson on Moon planetarynames wr usgs gov Retrieved 28 January 2017 Glasstone Samuel Dolan Philip J eds 1977 The effects of nuclear weapons 3rd ed Washington U S Department of Defense p 45 hdl 2027 uc1 31822004829784 About Wilson Society www srcf ucam org Retrieved 28 January 2017 Papers of Charles Thomson Rees Wilson 1869 1959 Nobel Prize winner and Professor of Natural Philosophy University of Cambridge Archives Hub Retrieved 28 January 2017 External links edit nbsp Media related to Charles Thomson Rees Wilson at Wikimedia Commons C T R Wilson on Nobelprize org nbsp The Papers of C T R Wilson held at Churchill Archives Centre Academic offices Preceded byJames Dewar Jacksonian Professor of Natural Philosophy1875 1923 Succeeded byEdward Victor Appleton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Thomson Rees Wilson amp oldid 1215854942, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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