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Rayleigh, Lord John William

John William Lord Rayleigh (1842-1919 Nobel Prize for chemistry 1904) and Sir William Ramsay (1852-1916 Nobel Prize for physics 1904). Isolated by liquefaction of air and identified as a new element by spectral analysis. [Pg.42]

William Ramsay and Lord Rayleigh (John William Strutt) isolated the noble gases. [Pg.231]

From Lord Rayleigh (John William Strutt), On the instability in Jets, Proc. London Math, Soc. 10 4-13 (1879) reprinted in Scientific Papers of Lord Rayleigh, Dover, New York, 1964, p. 362. Quoted by permission of the publisher. [Pg.505]

Strutt, John William (Lord Rayleigh) was born 12 November 1842 and died 30 June 1919. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1904 for discovering Ar and succeeded James Clerk Maxwell as the Cavendish Professor in Cambridge. [Pg.177]

P.N.T. Wells, Lord Rayleigh John William Strutt, third Baron Rayleigh. IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Ferroelectr. Freq. Control 54(3), 591-596 (2007). doi 10.1109/ TUFFC.2007.281... [Pg.299]

Although mathematical theory is central to aU acoustics, the two major divisions, physical and applied acoustics, evolved from the central theoretical core. In the late nineteenth century, Hermann von Helmholtz and Lord Rayleigh (John William Strutt), two polymaths, developed the theoretical aspects. Helmholtz s contributions to acoustics were primarily in explaining the physiological aspects of the ear. Rayleigh, a well-educated wealthy English baron, synthesized virtually all previous knowledge of acoustics and also formulated an appreciable corpus of experiment and theory. [Pg.3]

Argon Ar 1894 (London and Bristol, England) John William Strutt,aka Lord Rayleigh (British) and Sir William Ramsay (Scottish) 267... [Pg.395]

John William Strutt, the third Lord Rayleigh, was born at Terling on November 12,1842. His ability for clear thinking and self-expression was evident in his student days, and when he was Senior Wrangler in the Tripos in 1865, one of his examiners remarked, Strutt s papers were so good that they could have been sent straight to press without revision (41). [Pg.780]

John William Strutt, the Third Lord Rayleigh, 1842-1919. [Pg.780]

Birth of John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh, at Terling, England. [Pg.893]

Helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon and the radioactive element radon make up a most unusual group of non-metals, called the noble gases. They were all discovered after Mendeleev had published his periodic table. They were discovered between 1894 and 1900, mainly through the work of the British scientists Sir William Ramsay (Figure 9.16a) and Lord John William Strutt Rayleigh (Figure 9.16b). [Pg.154]

Argon was discovered in 1894 by English chemist John William Strutt, most commonly known as Lord Rayleigh (1842-1919), and Scottish chemist William Ramsay (1852-1916). It was the first of the noble gases to be isolated. [Pg.25]

The German physicist Wilhelm Wien had proposed such an equation, which worked well only for high frequencies, and Lord Rayleigh (bom John William Stmtt) proposed another equation, which worked well only at low frequencies. In 1900 Planck was able to develop a single expression that combined these two earfier equations and accurately predicted the energy over the entire range of frequencies. [Pg.960]

Figure 3.20 Lord John William Strut Rayleigh, a very influential physicist who made significant contributions in optical and radiation physics. The optical resolution criterion, so central in lithography for judging the capability of an exposure tool, is named after him. (Published with permission from Deutsches Museum, Munich.)... Figure 3.20 Lord John William Strut Rayleigh, a very influential physicist who made significant contributions in optical and radiation physics. The optical resolution criterion, so central in lithography for judging the capability of an exposure tool, is named after him. (Published with permission from Deutsches Museum, Munich.)...
The solid work Bohr took up, in February 1905, when he was nineteen years old, was a problem in experimental physics. Each year the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters announced problems for study against a two-year deadline, after which the academy awarded gold and silver medals for successful papers. In 1905 the physics problem was to determine the surface tension of a number of liquids by measuring the waves produced in those liquids when they were allowed to run out through a hole (the braided cascade of a garden hose demonstrates such waves). The method had been proposed by the British Nobelist John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh, but no one had yet tried it out. Bohr and one other contestant accepted the challenge. [Pg.62]


See other pages where Rayleigh, Lord John William is mentioned: [Pg.100]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.513]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.1719]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.6]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.69 ]




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John, William

Rayleigh, Lord

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