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Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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DEGREES KELVIN


A TALE OF GENIUS, INVENTION, AND TRAGEDY

Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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DEGREES KELVIN

A TALE OF GENIUS, INVENTION, AND TRAGEDY

David Lindley

Joseph Henry Press
Washington, D.C.

Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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Joseph Henry Press
500 Fifth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20001

The Joseph Henry Press, an imprint of the National Academies Press, was created with the goal of making books on science, technology, and health more widely available to professionals and the public. Joseph Henry was one of the founders of the National Academy of Sciences and a leader in early American science.

Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this volume are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Academy of Sciences or its affiliated institutions.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Lindley, David, 1956-

Degrees Kelvin : a tale of genius, invention, and tragedy / David Lindley.

p. cm.

Includes bibliographical references.

ISBN 0-309-09073-3 (hbk.)

1. Kelvin, William Thomson, Baron, 1824-1907. 2. Physicists—Great Britain—Biography. I. Title.

QC16.K3L56 2004

530′.092—dc22

2003022885

Permission: The Syndics of Cambridge University Library in order to quote from the Kelvin and Stokes collections.

Copyright 2004 by David Lindley. All rights reserved.

Printed in the United States of America.

Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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CONTENTS

 

 

Acknowledgments

 

vii

 

 

Introduction

 

1

1

 

Cambridge

 

11

2

 

Conundrums

 

64

3

 

Cable

 

114

4

 

Controversies

 

164

5

 

Compass

 

215

6

 

Kelvin

 

260

 

 

Epilogue

 

309

 

 

Bibliography

 

317

 

 

Notes

 

325

 

 

Index

 

353

Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
×

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Research for this book was done mostly at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, especially the Radcliffe Science Library, and at Cambridge University Library. I am grateful to the staff at both institutions for their help. I particularly thank Adam Perkins and his staff at the Scientific Manuscripts Collections at Cambridge. Last minute assistance from the Niels Bohr Library of the American Institute of Physics is much appreciated.

My agent, Susan Rabiner, helped shape the story into a more purposeful tale than the amorphous mass it might otherwise have been. Jeff Robbins at the Joseph Henry Press encouraged me to untangle some knots in the original manuscript and professed to be not unduly disturbed that I didn’t quite make the deadline. Chris Butcher scanned and tweaked several of the images reproduced here. Robert Fairley kindly provided copies of Jemima Blackburn’s watercolor of the Thomson brothers and Helmholtz and the striking photograph of Kelvin as an elderly man. Thanks to all.

For all kinds of other moral and practical support during a couple of peripatetic years, including but not limited to places to stay; rides to and from airports; use of the old blue Toyota; Internet connections; assorted computer peripherals plus technical assistance; beer, pizza, and bridge parties; bibliophilic companionship in Hay-on-Wye; excuses to go sight-

Page viii Cite
Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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seeing; distracting e-mails and phone calls; and a variety of opportunities to think about something other than this book, my thanks go to Liz Pennisi and Matt Butcher, Hellen Gelband, Karen Hopkin, Stephen Lindley, Bob Shackleton and Cathy Mattingly, Christine Mlot, Damaris Christensen, and Kay Behrensmeyer and Bill Keyser.

I want lastly to thank Michael Nauenberg for his review of the manuscript, which made me rethink some of my opinions, especially of thermodynamic history. Professor Nauenberg and I still don’t entirely agree, but I hope our differences are honorable. The history of science is a branch of history, after all; definitive conclusions are hard to come by.

Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." David Lindley. 2004. Degrees Kelvin: A Tale of Genius, Invention, and Tragedy. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press. doi: 10.17226/10736.
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LORD KELVIN. In 1840, a precocious 16-year-old by the name of William Thomson spent his summer vacation studying an extraordinarily sophisticated mathematical controversy. His brilliant analysis inspired lavish praise and made the boy an instant intellectual celebrity.

As a young scholar William dazzled a Victorian society enthralled with the seductive authority and powerful beauty of scientific discovery. At a time when no one really understood heat, light, electricity, or magnetism, Thomson found key connections between them, laying the groundwork for two of the cornerstones of 19th century science—the theories of electromagnetism and thermodynamics.

Charismatic, confident, and boyishly handsome, Thomson was not a scientist who labored quietly in a lab, plying his trade in monkish isolation. When scores of able tinkerers were flummoxed by their inability to adapt overland telegraphic cables to underwater, intercontinental use, Thomson took to the high seas with new equipment that was to change the face of modern communications. And as the world's navies were transitioning from wooden to iron ships, they looked to Thomson to devise a compass that would hold true even when surrounded by steel.

Gaining fame and wealth through his inventive genius, Thomson was elevated to the peerage by Queen Victoria for his many achievements. He was the first scientist ever to be so honored. Indeed, his name survives in the designation of degrees Kelvin, the temperature scale that begins with absolute zero, the point at which atomic motion ceases and there is a complete absence of heat. Sir William Thomson, Lord Kelvin, was Great Britain's unrivaled scientific hero.

But as the century drew to a close and Queen Victoria's reign ended, this legendary scientific mind began to weaken. He grudgingly gave way to others with a keener, more modern vision. But the great physicist did not go quietly. With a ready pulpit at his disposal, he publicly proclaimed his doubts over the existence of atoms. He refused to believe that radioactivity involved the transmutation of elements. And believing that the origin of life was a matter beyond the expertise of science and better left to theologians, he vehemently opposed the doctrines of evolution, repeatedly railing against Charles Darwin. Sadly, this pioneer of modern science spent his waning years arguing that the Earth and the Sun could not be more than 100 million years old. And although his early mathematical prowess had transformed our understanding of the forces of nature, he would never truly accept the revolutionary changes he had helped bring about, and it was others who took his ideas to their logical conclusion.

In the end Thomson came to stand for all that was old and complacent in the world of 19th century science. Once a scientific force to be reckoned with, a leader to whom others eagerly looked for answers, his peers in the end left him behind—and then meted out the ultimate punishment for not being able to keep step with them. For while they were content to bury him in Westminster Abbey alongside Isaac Newton, they used his death as an opportunity to write him out of the scientific record, effectively denying him his place in history. Kelvin's name soon faded from the headlines, his seminal ideas forgotten, his crucial contributions overshadowed.

Destined to become the definitive biography of one of the most important figures in modern science, Degrees Kelvin unravels the mystery of a life composed of equal parts triumph and tragedy, hubris and humility, yielding a surprising and compelling portrait of a complex and enigmatic man.

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