C. T. R. Wilson AKA Charles Thomson Rees Wilson Born: 14-Feb-1869 Birthplace: Glencorse, Midlothian, Scotland Died: 15-Nov-1959 Location of death: Carlops, Peeblesshire, Scotland Cause of death: Heart Failure
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Nationality: Scotland Executive summary: Cloud chamber Meteorological physicist Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, better known as C. T. R. Wilson, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1927 for his 1895 invention of the cloud chamber. In studying cloud formation, he had sought to recreate this phenomenon in his laboratory, surmising that clouds would form if saturated air was allowed to expand and cool. To his surprise, he found that dust particles are required, to trigger the process of forming water droplets, and that firing x-rays through the dust speeds the process. He constructed a more advanced cloud chamber in 1910, proving that water droplets can be formed by charged subatomic particles traveling through supersaturated air. In 1911 he became the first scientist to observe and photograph the paths of particles through a gas, adding compelling visual evidence to support theories of atomic structure.
The Wilson cloud chamber was used for decades for studying cosmic rays, radioactivity, x-rays, and was instrumental in the development of nuclear weapons. Among other important research, Wilson cloud chambers were used to prove the reality of the Compton effect postulated by Arthur H. Compton, the discovery of the positron by Carl David Anderson, and the transmutation of atomic nuclei by John Cockcroft and Ernest T. S. Walton. The Wilson condensation cloud, which forms in the shape of smoke rings and is characteristically caused by a nuclear detonation over water, is named for Wilson. Father: John Wilson, Jr. (shepherd, b. 23-May-1819, d. 9-Aug-1872 cancer) Mother: Annie Clark Harper (b. 4-May-1839, d. 11-Jan-1922) Sister: Helen Wilson (b. 19-Oct-1864) Brother: George Harper Wilson (b. 29-Mar-1867) Wife: Jessie Fraser Dick (b. 6-Jun-1877, m. 30-Jun-1908, d. 1967, two sons, two daughters) Daughter: Jessie Wilson Son: Charlie Wilson
High School: Owen's College, University of Manchester (1888) University: BS, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge University (1892) Scholar: Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge University (1892-94) Teacher: Bradford Grammar School, Frizinghall, England (1894-95) Scholar: Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge University (1894-1900) Lecturer: Cambridge University (1900-18) Teacher: Electrical Meteorology, Cambridge University (1918-25) Professor: Jacksonian Professor of Natural History, Cambridge University (1925-36)
Royal Society 1900 Nobel Prize for Physics 1927 (with Arthur H. Compton) Hughes Medal 1911 William Hopkins Prize 1920
RSE Gunning Prize 1921
Royal Medal 1922 Howard Potts Medal 1925
Copley Medal 1935 Lunar Crater Wilson (69.2° S, 42.4° W, 69 km. diameter) Scottish Ancestry
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