William Hyde Wollaston
was born on 6 August 1766 in East Dereham, Norfolk, UK.
He obtained a doctorate in medicine from Cambridge in 1793.
While practicing medicine for many years, he also became
interested in chemistry, physics, crystallography
and metallurgy, to which he devoted himself fully from 1800
onward. In the early 1800's he developed
a physico-chemical method for the processing of Platinum ore,
which made him a wealthy man and led him to the discovery
of the chemical elements Palladium (1803) and Rhodium (1804). He invented
various optical instruments for the measurement of angles
between crystal planes, of the refraction index of transparent
solids, and to aid in accurate microscopic observations.
In the last years of his life he carried out electrical
experiments paving the way to the design of the electric motor.
He became involved in a priority controversy with
his fellow countryman
Michael Faraday (1791-1867), who was undoubtedly the
first to produce a workable electrical
motor design, yet remained reticent to grant Wollaston credit
for his earlier work.
Wollaston's claim to astronomical fame rests on his observations
of dark lines in the solar spectrum. He noticed these while
carrying out optical experiments aimed at determining refractive
indices of various transparent substances, but did not attach
great importance to this discovery, leaving it to
Joseph von Fraunhofer to rediscover
and study them in great details fifteen years later.
Wollaston was widely considered as one of the leading scientists
of his time. He was elected to the Royal Society in 1793, which he served
as its Secretary from 1804 to 1816. He died in London on 22 December
1828.
Bibliography:
Porter, R. (ed.) 1994, The Biographical Dictionary of Scientists,
Oxford University Press.
Newton
Fraunhofer
J. Writter
Kirchhoff
Secchi
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