Saturday, August 3, 2019
Lord Kelvin (1824 - 1907) :: essays research papers
 Lord Kelvin (1824 - 1907)      William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) was born June 26, 1824 in Belfast, Ireland,  and was part of a large family whose mother died when he was six. His father  taught Kelvin and his brothers mathematics to a level beyond that of university  courses of the time.    Kelvin was somewhat of a genius, and had his first papers published in 1840.  These papers contained an argument defending the work of Fourier (Fourier  transforms), which at the time was being heavily criticized by British  scientists. He proved Fourierââ¬â¢s theories to be right. In 1839 Kelvin wrote an  essay which he called " An Essay on the Figure of the Earth." He used this essay  as a source and inspiration for ideas all his life and won an award from the  University of Glasgow in Scotland. Kelvin remained at the University for the  rest of his working life.    Kelvin first defined the absolute temperature scale in 1847, which was later  named after him. In 1851 he published the paper, "On the Dynamical Theory of  Heat", and in the same year was elected to the Royal Society. This work  contained his ideas and version of the second law of thermodynamics as well as  James Jouleââ¬â¢s idea of the mechanical equivalent of heat. This idea claimed that  heat and motion were combined, which now is taken as second nature. At the time,  heat was thought to have been a fluid of some kind.    Kelvin also maintained an interest in the age of the sun and calculated values  for it. He assumed that the sun produced its radiant energy from the  gravitational potential of matter falling into the sun. In collaboration with  Hermann von Helmholtz, he calculated and published in 1853 a value of 50 million  years. He also had an interest in the age of the earth, and he calculated that  the earth was a maximum of 400 million years old. These calculations were based  on the rate of cooling of a globe of matter after first solidification occurs (  such as the beginning of the earth). He also calculated that molecular motion  stops at -273 degrees Celsius. He called this temperature absolute zero.    Kelvin started work in 1854 on the project of laying transatlantic cables. His  idea was that electrical current flow was similar to that of heat flow, and by  applying ideas on heat flow, helped in the problem of transmitting electrical  signals over long distances. In 1866, Kelvin succeeded in laying the first  successful transatlantic cable.    Kelvin invented the mirror galvanometer which he patented in 1858 as a long    					    
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