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See also: English chemist and physicist, was See also: born in See also: London on the 17th of See also: June 1832, and studied chemistry at the Royal See also: College of Chemistry under A
.
W. von See also: Hofmann, whose assistant he became in 1851
.
Three years later he was appointed an assistant in the meteorological department of the See also: Radcliffe See also: observatory, See also: Oxford, and in 1855 he obtained a chemical See also: post at See also: Chester
.
In 1861, while conducting a spectroscopic. examination of the See also: residue See also: left in the manufacture of sulphuric acid, he observed a bright See also: green See also: line which had not been noticed previously, and by following up the indication thus given he succeeded in isolating a new See also: element, See also: thallium, a specimen of which was shown in public for the first See also: time at the See also: exhibition of 1862
.
During the next eight years he carried out a minute investigation of this See also: metal and its properties
.
While determining its atomic See also: weight, he thought it desirable, for the See also: sake of accuracy, to weigh it in a vacuum, and even in these circumstances he found that the balance behaved in an anomalous manner, the metal appearing to be heavier when cold than when hot
.
This phenomenon he explained as a " repulsion from See also: radiation," and he expressed his See also: discovery in the statement that in a vessel exhausted of air a See also: body tends to move away from another body hotter than itself
.
Utilizing this principle he constructed the See also: radiometer (q.v.), which he was at first disposed to regard as a machine that directly transformed See also: light into motion, but which was afterwards perceived to depend on thermal See also: action
.
Thence he was led to his famous researches on the phenomena produced by the discharge of See also: electricity through highly exhausted tubes (sometimes known as " See also: Crookes' tubes " in consequence), and to the development of his theory of " radiant See also: matter " or matter in a " See also: fourth See also: state," which led up to the See also: modern electronic theory
.
In 1883 he began an inquiry into the nature and constitution of the rare earths
.
By repeated
fractionations he was able to See also: divide yttrium into distinct portions produce of cereals or other cultivated See also: plants, the See also: wheat-crop, which gave different spectra when exposed in a high vacuum the See also: cotton-crop and the like, and generally, " the crops "; to the spark from an induction coil
.
This result he considered
to be due, not to any removal of impurities, but to an actual splitting-up of the yttrium molecule into its constituents, and he ventured to draw the provisional conclusion that the so-called See also: simple bodies are in reality compound molecules, at the same time sngges sing that all the elements have been produced by a See also: process of See also: evolution from one primordial stuff or " protyle." A later result of this method of investigation was the discovery of a new member of the rare earths, monium or victorium, the spectrum of which is characterized by an isolated See also: group of lines, only to be detected photographically, high up in the ultra-See also: violet; thz existence of this body was announced in his presidential address to the See also: British Association at See also: Bristol in 1898
.
In the same address he called See also: attention to the conditions of the See also: world's See also: food supply, urging that with the low yield at See also: present realized per See also: acre the supply of wheat would within a comparatively See also: short time cease to be equal to the demand caused by increasing population, and that since nitrogenous See also: manures are essential for an increase in the yield, the hope of averting See also: starvation, as regards those races for whom wheat is a See also: staple food, depended on the ability of the chemist to find an artificial method for fixing the nitrogen of the air
.
An authority on precious stones, and especially the See also: diamond, he succeeded in artificially making some minute specimens of the latter See also: gem; and on the discovery of See also: radium he was one of the first to take up the study of its properties, in particular inventing the spinthariscope, an instrument in which the effects of a trace of radium See also: salt are manifested by the See also: phosphorescence produced on a See also: zinc sulphide screen
.
In addition to many other researches besides those here mentioned, he wrote or edited various books on chemistry and chemical technology, including Select Methods of Chemical Analysis, which went through a number of See also: editions; and he also gave a certain amount of time to the investigation of psychic phenomena, endeavouring to effect some measure of correlation between them and ordinary See also: physical See also: laws
.
He was knighted in 1897, and received the Royal (1875), See also: Davy (1888), and See also: Copley (1904) medals of the Royal Society, besides filling the offices of president of the Chemical Society and of the Institution of Electrical See also: Engineers
.
He married Ellen, daughter of W
.
Humphrey, of See also: Darlington, and their See also: golden See also: wedding was celebrated in 1906
.
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