| Rayleigh, Lord John William Strutt (1842-1919) |
| English physicist who wrote
the standard treatise The Theory of Sound (1877-78), experimented in optics
and microscopy, and, with William Ramsay, discovered argon. Nobel prize
1904. Rayleigh was born in Essex and studied at Cambridge. He set up a laboratory at his home and was professor of experimental physics at Cambridge 1879-84, making the Cavendish Laboratory an important research centre. In 1871, Rayleigh explained that the blue colour of the sky arises from the scattering of light by dust particles in the air, and was able to relate the degree of scattering to the wavelength of the light. He also made the first accurate definition of the resolving power of diffraction gratings, which led to improvements in the spectroscope. He completed in 1884 the standardization of the three basic electrical units: the ohm, ampere, and volt. His insistence on accuracy prompted the designing of more precise electrical instruments. After leaving Cambridge, Rayleigh continued to do research in a broad range of subjects including light and sound radiation, thermodynamics, electromagnetism, and mechanics. An inconsistency in the Rayleigh-Jeans equation, published by Rayleigh 1900 (amended 1905 by James Jeans), which described the distribution of wavelengths in black-body radiation (see black body), led to the formulation shortly after of the quantum theory by German physicist Max Planck. |