Sir Joseph John Thomson, more commonly known as J. J.
Thomson, was an English physicist who stormed the world of nuclear physics with
his 1897 discovery of the electron, as well as isotopes. He is also credited
with the invention of the mass spectrometer. He received the Nobel Prize for
Physics in 1906 and was knighted two years later in 1908.
Early Life and Education:
Born in 1856 in Cheetham Hill near Manchester, England,
J. J. Thomson was the son of a Scottish bookseller. He won a scholarship to
Trinity College, Cambridge in 1876. He received his BA in 1880 in mathematics
and MA in 1883.
Contributions and Achievements:
J. J. Thomson was appointed a Fellow of the Royal
Society 1865. He was a successor to Lord Rayleigh as Cavendish Professor of
Experimental Physics. His favorite student Ernst Rutherford later succeeded him
in 1919. The early theoretical work of Thomson broadened the electromagnetic
theories of James Clerk Maxwell’s, which revolutionized the study of gaseous
conductors of electricity, as well as the nature of cathode rays.
Inspired by Wilhelm Röntgen’s 1895 discovery of X-rays,
Thomson demonstrated that cathode rays were actually some speedily moving
particles. After measuring their speed and specific charge, he concluded that
these “corpuscles” (electrons) were about 2000 times smaller in mass as
compared to the hydrogen ion, the lightest-known atomic particle. The
discovery, made public during Thomson’s 1897 lecture to the Royal Institution,
was labeled as the most influential breakthrough in the history of physics
since Sir Isaac Newton.
Thomson also researched on the nature of positive rays
in 1911, which significantly helped in the discovery of Isotopes. He proved
that isotopes could be broke by deflecting positive rays in electric and
magnetic fields, which was later named mass spectrometry.
J. J. Thomson was awarded the Nobel Prize for physics
in 1906. He was knighted in 1908. He published his autobiography “Recollections
and Reflections” in 1936. Thomson is widely considered to be one of the
greatest scientists ever, and the most influential pioneer of nuclear physics.
Later Life and Death:
J. J. Thomson was made the Master of Trinity College,
Cambridge in 1918, where he remained until his death. He died on August 30,
1940. He was 83 years old. Thomson was buried close to Isaac Newton in
Westminster Abbey.
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