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Maxwell, James Clerk |
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Maxwell, James Clerk (1831–1879)Scottish physicist. His main achievement was in the understanding of electromagnetic waves: Maxwell's equations bring together electricity, magnetism, and light in one set of relations. He studied gases, optics, and the sensation of colour, and his theoretical work in magnetism prepared the way for wireless telegraphy and telephony. In developing the kinetic theory of gases, Maxwell gave the final proof that heat resides in the motion of molecules. Studying colour vision, Maxwell explained how all colours could be built up from mixtures of the primary colours red, green, and blue. Maxwell confirmed English physicist Thomas Young's theory that the eye has three kinds of receptors sensitive to the primary colours, and showed that colour blindness is due to defects in the receptors. In 1861 he produced the first colour photograph to use a three-colour process.
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Further work by scientists such as James Clerk Maxwell, Ludwig Boltzmann, and Ruldolf Clausius led to the laws of thermodynamics, which would overturn Newton's errant rules. He mentions that when James Clerk Maxwell identified light as waves of electromagnetic energy, the question seemed settled in a most conclusive and satisfactory way until, in the early years of this century, Max Plank and Albert Einstein showed that in some circumstances light behaved not as waves but as "pellets" or "packets" of discrete energy quanta. On the walls of his Princeton study, Einstein hung portraits of Mahatma Gandhi, James Clerk Maxwell and Michael Faraday. |
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