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Tyndall, John (1820-1893)| Irish physicist who 1869 studied the scattering of light by invisibly small suspended particles in colloids. Known as the Tyndall effect, it was first observed with colloidal solutions, in which a beam of light is made visible when it is scattered by minute colloidal particles (whereas a pure solvent does not scatter light). Similar scattering of blue wavelengths of sunlight by particles in the atmosphere makes the sky look blue (beyond the atmosphere, the sky is black). |
| Tyndall was born in County Carlow and studied at Marburg, Germany. He became professor at the Royal Institution 1853 and was also professor at the Royal School of Mines 1859-68. As superintendent of the Royal Institution from 1867, he did much to popularize science in Britain and also in the USA, where he toured from 1872 to 1873. |
| Having established that there are dust particles suspended in the air, Tyndall was able to show that the air contains living micro-organisms. This confirmed the work of French chemist Louis Pasteur that rejected the spontaneous generation of life, and it also inspired Tyndall to develop methods of sterilizing by heat treatment. |
| Tyndall also carried out experimental work on the absorption and transmission of heat by gases, especially water vapour and atmospheric gases, which was important in the development of meteorology. |
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