Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Sir Joseph John Thomson :: biographies bio
Could anything at first sight seem  more impractical than a body which is  so small that its mass is an  insignificant fraction of the mass of  an atom of hydrogen?  -- J.J. Thomson.    * Sir Joseph John Thomson was born December 18, 1856 in Cheetham Hill  dear Manchester, England.    *   His dad was a bookkeeper in Manchester who died with Thomson was 16 years old.    * He entered Owens College, now known as the Victoria University of Manchester, at age 14.    * There he took courses in experimental  natural philosophy and math.    * In 1876, he obtained a scholarship for Trinity College, University of Cambridge, and remained there for the rest of his life.    * In 1890, he married  travel Elisabeth.    * He and Rose had a son, Sir George Paget Thomson, Emeritus Professor of Physics at London University, and a daughter.    * Thomson taught mathematics and physics at Cambridge, succeeding Lord Rayleigh as professor of physics at the age of 27.    *   He became director of Cambridges    Cavendish Laboratory to do research from 1884 through 1919.    *   For his involvement in the scientific community, he was appointed president of the  kingly Society, a position he maintained from 1915 through 1920.    * He was invited to be professor of natural philosophy at the Royal Institute of Great Britain from 1905 to 1918.    * He served as master of Trinity College from 1918 until his death.    * He was also very active in many other fields of interest other than science. He was  tough in politics, current fiction, drama, university sports, and the non-technical aspects of science.    * His greatest interest outside of physics was plants. He enjoyed walks in the hilly regions near Cambridge, where he searched for rare botanical specimens for his garden.    * He died  haughty 30, 1940 at Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England. He was given the honor of burial in the Westminster Abbey.    * J.J. Thomson attempted to solve the argument on the nature of cathode rays in 1897. For th   ese investigations he won the Nobel  booty for physics in 1906.  
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