For Science lovers, today would have been Scientist, Anders Jonas Angstrom's 200th Birthday, if he were alive of course. But the man had made and left a remarkable legacy! Here's his story.
Anders Jonas Ångström was born in Medelpad. He moved to and was educated at Uppsala
University, where in 1839 he became docent in physics. In 1842 he went to the Stockholm
Observatory to gain experience in practical astronomical work, and the
following year he was appointed keeper of the Uppsala Astronomical Observatory.
Becoming interested in terrestrial magnetism he made many observations of
magnetic intensity and declination in various parts of Sweden, and was charged
by the Stockholm Academy of Sciences with the task, not completed till shortly
before his death, of working out the magnetic data obtained by the Swedish
frigate "Eugenie" on her voyage around the world in 1851 to 1853.
This
statement, as Sir Edward Sabine remarked when awarding him the Rumford medal of
the Royal Society in 1872, contains a fundamental principle of spectrum analysis,
and though overlooked for a number of years it entitles him to rank as one of
the founders of spectroscopy.
From 1861 onwards, he paid special attention to the solar spectrum. His
combination of the spectroscope with photography for the study of the Solar
System resulted in proving that the Sun's atmosphere contains hydrogen, among
other elements (1862), and in 1868 he published his great map of the normal solar
spectrum in Recherches sur le spectre solaire, including detailed
measurements of more than 1000 spectral lines, which long remained
authoritative in questions of wavelength, although his measurements were
inexact by one part in 7000 or 8000, owing to the metre he used as a standard
being slightly too short.
He was the first, in 1867, to examine the spectrum of the aurora borealis,
and detected and measured the characteristic bright line in its yellow-green
region; but he was mistaken in supposing that this same line, which is often
called by his name, is also to be seen in the zodiacal light.
He was elected a member of a number of learned societies, including the Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1850, the Royal Society in 1870 and the Institut
de France in 1873.
His son, Knut (1857–1910), was also a physicist. He died in Uppsala on 21 June 1874. He lived for 59 years.
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