Identity area
Reference code
Glover/A/A1/11/1/44
Unique identifier
Title
Date(s)
- 26 June 1937 (Creation)
Level of description
Item
Extent and medium
1 p. paper
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Physicist. Admitted pensioner at St John's 1876; B.A. (Senior Wrangler and 1st Smith's Prize) 1880; M.A. 1883; Fellow, 1880-1942; Professor of Natural Philosophy, Queen's College, Galway, 1880-5; University Lecturer in mathematics at Cambridge, 1885-1903; Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, 1903-32; F.R.S., 1892 and Secretary of the Royal Society, 1901-12; Knighted, 1909; M.P. for the University, 1911-22; Revised J. Clerk Maxwell's edition of the papers of Henry Cavendish (1921), and edited the collected works of James Thomson (1912), the fourth and fifth volumes (1904-5) of the works of Sir G. G. Stokes, and the fourth, fifth, and sixth volumes (1910-11) of those of Lord Kelvin. Published Aether and Matter (1900) which gained the Adams Prize in the University of Cambridge. In this work he developed an analysis of the dynamical relations of the aether to material systems on the basis of the atomic constitution of matter, and included a discussion of the influence of the earth's motion on optical phenomena. He was also the first to give a formula for the rate of radiation of energy from an accelerated electron, and also to give an explanation of the effect of a magnetic field in splitting the lines of the spectrum into multiple lines
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Archival history
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Appreciates Glover's tribute to 'the Museum Official'. Suggests that Glover and Dil Calvin have the chance to produce a 'classic description of a wonderful country [Canada]'. Compares Canada on a Mercator projection to on a globe. Remarks that Russia and British or Canadian [?] are destined to have a frontier at the North Pole and imagines a race to see who 'annexes' the pole. Complains that contemporary writers in American journals have 'Slav or Jewish names'. Expresses his interest in John Calvin. Recommends the writing of H. A. L. Fisher.