Kelvin, Lord (William Thomson) (1824-1907)

  • Kelvin, William Thomson, Baron, 1824-1907.
Date:
1849-1904
Reference:
MS.8706
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

9 autographed letters from William Thomson, Baron Kelvin, 1824-1907.

Publication/Creation

1849-1904

Physical description

1 file (9 items)

Acquisition note

Purchased from: Sotheby's, London, May 1930 (acc.52792), July 1931 (acc.57468), February 1932 (acc.76066); Stevens, London, September 1930 (acc.73068); Glendining, London, September 1932 (acc.67635); Desgranges, Paris, October 1935 (acc.69099); part of a batch of material transferred from Wellcome Historical Medical Museum offices: provenance not known (acc.69200); Provenance details not recorded (acc.67430); No accession details recorded for no. 4

Biographical note

William Thomson, Baron Kelvin (1824-1907), was born in Belfast and raised and privately educated by his father, James Thomson in Glasgow. He studied mathematics at Cambridge University from 1841 and by 1845 had been appointed a fellow of Peterhouse and the editor of the Cambridge Mathematical Journal. He was elected to the chair of mathematics at Glasgow university in 1846, at the age of twenty-two. In 1851, he first enunciated what would be referred to as the canonical 'Kelvin' statement of the second law of thermodynamics. Thomson popularized the new concept of 'energy' to a wider audience with a short paper to the Philosophical Magazine . His most celebrated textual embodiment of the 'science of energy' was Thomson and Tait's Treatise on Natural Philosophy (1867) which reinterpreted Newton's Third Law (action-reaction) as conversation of energy, with action viewed as rate of working. Thomson's direct involvement in the development of the transatlantic telegraph brought him a knighthood.

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