- William Allen Miller
William Allen Miller FRS (
December 17 1817 –September 30 1870 ) was a British scientist who taught atKing%27s College London , succeeding to the position held byJohn Frederic Daniell .Although primarily a chemist, the scientific contributions for which Miller is mainly remembered today are in
spectroscopy andastrochemistry , new fields in his time.Miller won the
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1867 jointly withWilliam Huggins , for their spectroscopic study of the composition ofstar s.In 1845, Miller was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Society .According to his obituary (see below), Miller married Eliza Forrest of Birmingham in 1842. He died in 1870, a year after his wife, and they are both buried in the "cemetery at Norwood." They were survived by a son and two daughters.
The Miller crater on the
Moon is named after him.References
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=YKsOAAAAIAAJ&pg=PT20&dq=william+allen+miller&as_brr=1#PPT20,M2 Obituary] - "Proceedings of the Royal Society of London", 1871, volume 19, pages xix-xxvi
* "William Allen Miller and William Hallowes Miller (A Note to the Early History of Spectroscopy)" by C. W. Adams in "Isis", 1943, volume 34, pages 337-339.
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=eYYDAAAAQAAJ&dq=william+allen+miller&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=v-CAYGf_lx&sig=Hx2aVVXvzMpSavx_Jrcx0SaUJtI#PPA5,M2 Introduction to the Study of Inorganic Chemistry] by W. A. Miller (1871) - Scanned at Google books
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