- Edward Victor Appleton
Infobox Scientist
name = Sir Edward Appleton
imagesize = 120px
caption = Edward Victor Appleton in army uniform, taken in World War I.
birth_date = birth date|1892|9|6
birth_place =Bradford ,West Yorkshire ,England
death_date = death date and age|1965|4|21|1892|9|6|
death_place =Edinburgh ,Scotland
nationality = English
field =Physics
work_institutions =Cambridge University King's College London Edinburgh University
alma_mater =Cambridge University
doctoral_advisor =J. J. Thomson Ernest Rutherford
doctoral_students =
notable_students =J. A. Ratcliffe
known_for = Ionospheric PhysicsAppleton layer
influences =
influenced =
prizes = nowrap|Nobel Prize in Physics 1947
religion =
footnotes =Sir Edward Victor Appleton, GBE (
September 6 ,1892 –April 21 ,1965 ) was an Englishphysicist .Biography
Appleton was born in
Bradford ,West Yorkshire and educated at Hanson Grammar School. At the age of 18 he won a scholarship toSt John's College, Cambridge . He graduated with a first class degree in Natural Sciences.During the First World War he joined the West Riding Regiment, and later transferred to the Royal Engineers.
After returning from active service in
World War I , Appleton became assistant demonstrator in experimental physics at theCavendish Laboratory in 1920. He was professor of physics atKing's College London (1924–36) and professor of natural philosophy at Cambridge University (1936–39). From 1939 to 1949 he was secretary of theDepartment of Scientific and Industrial Research . Knighted in 1941, he received the 1947Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to the knowledge of theionosphere , which led to the development ofradar .In 1902
Oliver Heaviside andArthur Edwin Kennelly independently proposed the idea of there being a conducting layer that reflected radio signals.Guglielmo Marconi had been able to make his historic transatlantic transmissions; to achieve this, refraction of the signals was necessary to reach its destination.In his work, Appleton had observed that the strength of the radio signal from a transmitter on a frequency such as the medium wave band and over a path of a hundred miles or so was constant during the day but that it varied during the night. This led to him to believe that it was possible that two radio signals were being received. One was traveling along the ground, and another was reflected by a layer in the upper atmosphere. The fading or variation in strength of the overall radio signal received resulted from the
interference pattern of the two signals.To prove his theory, in 1924 Appleton used the
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) radio broadcast transmitter atBournemouth , England. This transmitted a signal towards the upper reaches of the atmosphere. He received the radio signals nearCambridge , proving they were being reflected. By making a periodic change to the frequency of the broadcast radio signal he was able to measure the time taken for the signals to travel to the layers in the upper atmosphere and back. In this way he was able to calculate that the height of the reflecting layer was 60 miles above the ground.From 1949 until his death in 1965, he was Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Edinburgh . [cite book | first=Derek A J| last=Lister | title=Bradford's Own | year=2004 | publisher=Sutton | isbn=0-7509-3826-9]In 1974 the Radio and Space Research Station was renamed the Appleton Laboratory in honour of the man who had done so much to establish the UK as a leading force in ionospheric research, and had been involved with the station first as a researcher and then as secretary of its parent body, the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research.
Legacy
* the
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
* theAppleton Tower at theUniversity of Edinburgh
* the [http://www.bilk.ac.uk/college/depts/science/ Appleton Science Building] atBradford College
* The Appleton crater on theMoon was named in his honour.
* The Appleton Layer, which is the higher atmospheric ionized layer above the E-layer
* The annual [http://www.theiet.org/events/appleton/ Appleton Lecture] at the [http://www.theiet.org/ Institute of Engineering Technology] , IET.ee also
*
Kennelly-Heaviside layer Notes
References
*
External links
* [http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1947/index.html "Sir Edward Victor Appleton"] . "nobelprize.org". Accessed
October 21 ,2007 . (Citation: Nobel Prize in Physics: 1947, "for his investigations of the physics of the upper atmosphere especially for the discovery of the so-called Appleton layer." [Hyperlinked account. Provides link to BBC "Historic Figures" biography.]
* [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1947/appleton-bio.html "Sir Edward Victor Appleton: Nobel Prize in Physics 1947"] – Biography from "Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962" (Amsterdam: Elsevier Publishing Company, 1964). [Hyperlinked in previous entry.]
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/appleton_edward.shtml "Sir Edward Victor Appleton (1892 - 1965):] Appleton was an English physicist and Nobel prize winner who discovered the ionosphere." "Historic Figures", "bbc.co.uk". AccessedOctober 21 ,2007 . (Photograph of Appleton c. 1935 ©). [Provides link to Nobel Foundation account, listed above.]###@@@KEY@@@###
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