james clerk maxwell 1831 – 1879 bshm gresham lecture 31 st october 2012

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James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st October 2012 Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

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James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st October 2012. Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry. Key dates in the life of James Clerk Maxwell. James’ father, John, in about 1850. James with his mother, Frances, in about 1834. Edinburgh Academy, 1840. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

James Clerk Maxwell1831 – 1879

BSHM Gresham Lecture 31st October 2012

Raymond FloodGresham Professor of Geometry

Page 2: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Key dates in the life of James Clerk Maxwell

DATE EVENT1831 Born at 14 India Street, Edinburgh

and grew up at Glenlair1841 - 1847 Edinburgh Academy1847 - 1850 Edinburgh University1850 – 1856 Cambridge University1856 - 1860 Marischal College, Aberdeen1860 - 1865 King’s College, London1865 - 1871 Glenlair1871 – 1879 Cambridge University

Page 3: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

James with his mother, Frances, in about 1834

James’ father, John, in about 1850

Page 4: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Edinburgh Academy, 1840

Page 5: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 6: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Edinburgh University Library

Page 7: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 8: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Stokes theorem: Question 8 in the 1854 Smith’s prize examination paper in which Maxwell shared first prize

with E.J. Routh

Page 9: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Marischal College, Aberdeen.

Page 10: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Maxwell, Katherine and Toby in 1869

Page 11: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Inaugural lecture, King’s College 1860

“In this class I hope you will learn not merely results, or formulae applicable to cases that may possibly occur in our practice afterwards, but the principles on which those formulae depend, and without which the formulae are mere mental rubbish. I know the tendency of the human mind is to do anything rather than think. But mental labour is not thought, and those who have with labour acquired the habit of application, often find it much easier to get up a formula than to master a principle”

Page 12: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Glenlair, family home of the Maxwells in about 1884

Page 13: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Newton’s memorial in Westminster Abbey

James Clerk Maxwell buried with his parents and wife

in Parton Churchyard near Glenlair

Page 14: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

There is scarcely a single topic that he touched upon that he did not change almost beyond

recognition Charles Coulson

• Saturn’s rings• Colour vision• Kinetic Theory• Electromagnetism

Page 15: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Saturn’s rings

Page 16: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Saturn’s rings

Page 17: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Saturn’s rings

Page 18: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 19: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 20: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 21: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Colour Vision

Page 22: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Colour Vision

Page 23: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

On the theory of

compound colours in

1860

Page 24: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Tartan Ribbon

Page 25: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Kinetic Theory of Gases

Rudolf Clausius1822 - 1888

Page 26: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

If you go at 17 miles per minute and take a totally new course 1,700,000,000 times a second, where will you be in an hourLetter from Maxwell to Tait

Page 27: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 28: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012
Page 29: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Ludwig Boltzmann1844 - 1906

Page 30: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Oersted’s experiment

Michael Faraday 1791 - 1867

Electromagnetism

Page 31: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Faraday delivering a Christmas Lecture at the Royal institution in 1856

Iron filings scattered on paper over a magnet show the lines of force

Page 32: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Model of molecular vortices and electric particles

Page 33: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

we can scarcely avoid the inference that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric

and magnetic phenomena

Page 34: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Einstein on Maxwell

Since Maxwell’s time, physical reality has been thought of as represented by continuous fields, and not capable of any mechanical interpretation. This change in the conception of reality is the most profound and the most fruitful that physics has experienced since the time of Newton

Page 35: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Maxwell’s sense of fun is shown in this poem to Thomson’sgalvanometer (an

instrument for measuring current)

Page 36: James Clerk Maxwell 1831 – 1879 BSHM Gresham Lecture 31 st  October 2012

Lectures At the Museum of London

• Ghosts of Departed Quantities: Calculus and its Limits Tuesday 25 September 2012

• Polynomials and their Roots Tuesday 6 November 2012

• From One to Many Geometries Tuesday 11 December 2012

• The Queen of Mathematics Tuesday 22 January 2013

• Are Averages Typical? Tuesday 19 February 2013

• Modelling the World Tuesday 19 March 2013