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LORD RUTHERFORD

FAMOUS SCIENTIST DEAD Received Oct. 20, 5.5 p.m. LONDON, Oct. 19. The death is announced, following an abdominal operation, of Lord Rutherford of Nelson, the famous New Zealand scientist. One of the greatest scientists in the world was Lord Rutherford, who was worthy to rank amongst the most' distinguished British men of science,: present or past—Newton, Darwin,l and Faraday. What a long series of brilliant successes his career has been! New Zealand has, indeed, reason to be proud of him, for he was born at Nelson, South Island, in 1871. He quickly rose to eminence in his native land, achieving high honours in his University course, specialising in physics. In the year 1895 he entered the larger sphere of English scientific circles, commencing at the Cavendish laboratory at Cambridge, under the renowned Sir J. J. Thomson. First devoting his time to researches in electric waves and the velocity of ions in gases, he invented the form of electrical detector which bears has name.

At the early age of 27 years, this famous scientist was appointed Professor of Physics at McGill University, Montreal, in 1898. This, in itself, was a notable achievement. He had already started the most important work of his early career, and one with which his name ever will be associated—the investigation of radioactivity. Carrying on an extensive series of researches into the nature of radioactive changes, he enunciated, in conjunction with the distinguished Professor Soddy, the theory of atomic disintegration, which ever since has remained the basis of the study of radioactive phenomena. This led to a new conception of the nature of the

atom, and the complex structure which it possesses, so that a great advance was made towards the solution of the ultimate constitution of matter. Professor Rutherford was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society at the age of 32, and four years later was appointed Professor of Physics at the University of Manchester. Here he gathered about him a band of devoted research students, and further investigations were carried out on the rays which radium compounds emil. Rutherford demonstrated that the atom consists of a positively charged nucleus, surrounded by a distribution of electrons comparatively lar removed from it.

In the year 1919, he was appointed t n Cambridge, as Professor of Experimental Physics, 24 years after he had worked there as a student. Fifteen years before, be had been awarded the Nobel prize, and in 1921 he was appointed to the time-honoured post of Professor of Natural Philosophy at the Royal Institution. For his services in the cause of science he was krighted, and some years later he was elevated to the peerage. Lord Rutherford was be'ieved to bs the greatest experimenter since Faraday; at the time of his death he was devoting his labours to investigating the problem of atomic energy. He had succeeded in producing actual transformation of the elements, and it is impossible ic predict what gre.it discoveries may come of this. Needless to state, his students had boundb ss confidence in him, and it was said jocularly of him that he could arouse enthusiasm for science in anything short of a cow or a Cabinet Minister.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19371021.2.66

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 250, 21 October 1937, Page 7

Word Count
530

LORD RUTHERFORD Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 250, 21 October 1937, Page 7

LORD RUTHERFORD Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 80, Issue 250, 21 October 1937, Page 7