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See also: born in See also: Edinburgh on the 1st of See also: November 1828, and was educated at the university of that city
.
The son of a See also: tea See also: merchant, he was for some See also: time engaged in business in See also: Leith and in See also: Australia, but, returning to his studies of physics at Edinburgh, he became assistant to J
.
D
.
See also: Forbes in 1856
.
Forbes was especially interested in questions of heat, meteorology, and terrestrial See also: magnetism, and it was to these that See also: Stewart also mainly devoted himself
.
Radiant heat first claimed his
See also: attention, and by 1858 he had completed his first investigations into the subject
.
These yielded a remarkable extension of See also: Pierre See also: Prevost's " See also: Law of Exchanges," and enabled him to establish the fact that See also: radiation is not a See also: surface phenomenon, but takes place throughout the interior of the radiating See also: body, and that the radiative and absorptive See also: powers of a substance must be equal, not only for the radiation as a whole, but also for every constituent of it
.
In recognition of this See also: work he received in 1868 the Rumford medal of the Royal Society, into which he had been elected six years before, Of other papers in which he dealt with this and kindred branches of physics may be mentioned " Observations with a Rigid Spectroscope," " See also: Heating of a Disc by Rapid Motion in Vacuo," " Thermal Equilibrium in an Enclosure Containing See also: Matter in Visible Motion," and " See also: Internal Radiation in Uniaxal Crystals." In 18J9 he was appointed director of See also: Kew See also: Observatory, and there naturally became interested in problems of meteorology and terrestrial magnetism
.
In 187o, the See also: year in which he was very seriously injured in a railway accident, he was elected professor of physics at See also: Owens
' On the 6th of November 1878 his body was stolen from St Mark's churchyard in New See also: York, but recovered in 1881 upon the payment of $2o,000, and buried in the crypt of the See also: cathedral in Garden City
.
2 Upon her See also: death she See also: left a small See also: part of her estate to her other relatives and her servants, about $4,631,000 to See also: Charles J
.
Clinch, a kinsman, and about $9,262,000 to
See also: Judge See also: Henry Hilton (1824-1899), a business associate of Stewart, who had received a
See also: legacy of $1,000,000 from Stewart, and who managed Mrs Stewart's business affairs after her See also: husband's death
.
Clinch and Hilton were executors, and it was understood that Hilton should See also: complete the cathedral at Garden City and endow See also: schools there
.
A See also: nephew of Mrs Stewart in 1887 sued to break the will on the ground that Hilton had unduly influenced her; the See also: case was compromised out of See also: court in 1890 and Mrs Stewart's relatives received more of her estate than they would have .got under the terms of the testament
.
See also: College, Manchester, and retained that chair until his death, which happened near See also: Drogheda, in See also: Ireland, on the 19th of See also: December 1887
.
He was the author of several successful textbooks of science, and also of the article on " Terrestrial Magnetism " in the ninth edition of this See also: Encyclopaedia
.
In conjunction with Professor P
.
G
.
See also: Tait he wrote The Unseen Universe, at first published anonymously, which was intended to combat the See also: common notion of the incompatibility of science and See also: religion
.
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