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Harold A Wilson (physicist)

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Name
  
Harold Wilson

Role
  
Physicist


Died
  
1964

Notable awards
  
Royal Society

Harold A. Wilson (physicist) httpsscholarshipriceedubitstreamhandle1911

Born
  
Harold Albert Wilson1 December 1874York (
1874-12-01
)

Institutions
  
University of CambridgeUniversity of LeedsKing's College LondonRice UniversityCavendish LaboratoryUniversity of GlasgowMcGill University

Books
  
Experimental Physics: A Textbook of Mechanics, Heat, Sound and Light

Institution
  

Harold a wilson physicist


Harold Albert Wilson FRS (1 December 1874 – 1964) was an English physicist.

Contents

Background

Wilson was born in York, the son of a railway clerk. His mother, Anne Gill, was the daughter of a farmer and innkeeper from Topcliffe. Harold had one sister, Lilian, who would marry Sir Owen W. Richardson.

Education

Wilson was educated at Yorkshire College in Leeds, the University of Leeds and the University of Berlin.

Career

in 1896 he was a colleague of English physicist J. J. Thomson in Cambridge, and performed one of the earliest measurements of the electron's charge. He was awarded his Doctor of Science degree from London in 1900, and was elected Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge in October 1901. From 1901 to 1904, he was a student of James Clerk Maxwell the Cavendish Laboratory. He became a lecturer in Physics at King's College London, then professor at the college in 1905. In 1909 he was a professor at McGill University in Montreal. He joined the Rice Institute in 1912, becoming the first chair of the physics department. He spent a year at the University of Glasgow in 1924 before becoming a physicist for an oil company in Houston. He retired from Rice University in 1947.

Awards and honors

Wilson was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. The Wilson Award at Rice University is named after him.

References

Harold A. Wilson (physicist) Wikipedia


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