Lord Kelvin, Scottish mathematician and physicist, with his compass, 1902. Artist: James Craig Annan

Lord Kelvin, Scottish mathematician and physicist, with his compass, 1902. Artist: James Craig Annan

1-157-744 - Oxford Science Archive/Heritage Images

Lord Kelvin, Scottish mathematician and physicist, with his compass, 1902. Born William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824-1907) was educated at Glasgow and Cambridge. He was Professor of Natural Philosophy (Physics) at the University of Glasgow for 53 years. Kelvin was a pioneer of thermodynamics and electromagnetic theory and devised the temperature scale that bears his name. He also directed work on the first transatlantic cable telegraph, which gave him considerable wealth. He was probably the first scientist to become wealthy through his work. He turned to improving his compass comparitively late in life. It had a very light card giving a long period of oscillation. The compass was mounted in a binnacle fitted with magnets and spheres and was much more accurate than previous compasses.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. James Craig Annan, attributed to: British - Scottish: Photographer
Subject
  1. Lord Kelvin: British: Physicist, mathematician
People Related
  1. T & R Annan & Sons Ltd: British: Photographic studio

Medium
  1. Photograph

Picture Type
  1. Portrait

Category Hierarchy

Science & Nature Technology & Innovation

People Famous People

Trade & Industry Communications

Artistic Representations Portraits

Science & Nature Other


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3632x4808
File Size : 51,161kb


Aliases

  1. 006222
  1. 006222
  1. 0460000438
  1. 1-157-744
  1. 1157744
  1. 438

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