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Jean Bernard Léon Foucault (French
pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ bɛʁnaʁ leɔ̃ fuko]) (18 September 1819 – 11
February 1868) was a French physicist best known for the
invention of the Foucault pendulum, a device
demonstrating the effect of the Earth's rotation. He also made an
early measurement of the speed of light, discovered eddy currents, and
although he didn't invent it, is credited with naming the gyroscope. The Foucault
crater on the Moon is named after
him.
Early
years
Foucault was the son of a publisher in Paris, where he was born on September 18, 1819.
After an education received chiefly at home, he studied medicine,
which he abandoned in favour of physics due to a fear of blood.[1] He
first directed his attention to the improvement of L. J. M.
Daguerre's photographic processes. For three years he was
experimental assistant to Alfred Donné
(1801–1878) in his course of lectures on microscopic anatomy.
With A. H.
L. Fizeau he carried out a series of investigations on the
intensity of the light of the sun, as compared with that of carbon in the arc lamp, and of lime in the flame of the oxyhydrogen
blowpipe; on the interference of infrared
radiation, and of light rays differing greatly in lengths of
path; and on the chromatic polarization of light.
Middle
years
In 1850, he did an experiment using the Fizeau–Foucault apparatus to
measure the speed of light; it came to be known as the
Foucault–Fizeau experiment, and was viewed as "driving the last
nail in the coffin" of Newton's corpuscle
theory of light when it showed that light travels more slowly
through water than through air.[2]
In 1851, he provided the first experimental demonstration of the
rotation of the Earth on its axis (see diurnal motion). This was achieved by
considering the rotation of the plane of oscillation of a freely
suspended, long and heavy pendulum in the Panthéon in Paris. The experiment caused a
sensation in both the learned and popular worlds. In the following
year he used (and named) the gyroscope as a conceptually simpler
experimental proof. In 1855, he received the Copley Medal of the
Royal Society
for his 'very remarkable experimental researches'. Earlier in the
same year he was made physicien (physicist) at the
imperial observatory at Paris.
In September, 1855, he discovered that the force required for the rotation of a copper disc becomes greater when
it is made to rotate with its rim between the poles of a magnet, the disc at the same time
becoming heated by the eddy current or "Foucault currents"
induced in the metal.
Diagram of a variant of
Leon Foucault's speed
of light experiment where a modern laser is the source of
light.
In 1857, Foucault invented the polarizer which bears his name,
and in the succeeding year devised a method of testing the mirror
of a reflecting telescope to determine its shape.[3][4] The
so-called "Foucault Test" allows the worker to tell if
the mirror is perfectly spherical, or if it deviates from a sphere.
Prior to Foucault's invention, testing reflecting telescope mirrors
was a "hit or miss" proposition. With Charles Wheatstone’s revolving
mirror he, in 1862, determined the speed of light to be 298,000 km/s (about 185,000 mi./s) —10,000 km/s less than that obtained
by previous experimenters and only 0.6% off the currently accepted
value.
Later
years
In that year, he was made a member of the Bureau
des Longitudes and an officer of the Légion d'Honneur. In 1864 he was made a
member of the Royal
Society of London, and the next year a member of the mechanical
section of the Institute. In 1865 his papers on a modification of
Watt's governor
appeared, upon which he had for some time been experimenting with a
view to making its period of revolution constant, and on a new
apparatus for regulating the electric light; and in the year
(Compt. Rend. lxiii.) he showed how, by the deposition of a
transparently thin film of silver on the outer side of the object glass of
a telescope, the sun could be viewed without injuring the eye. His
chief scientific papers are to be found in the Comptes
Rendus, 1847—1869.
Death and
afterwards
Grave of Jean Bernard Léon Foucault on Cimetière de
Montmartre.
Foucault died of what was probably a rapidly-developing case of
multiple
sclerosis[5] on
February 11, 1868 in Paris and was buried in the Cimetière de
Montmartre.
Further
reading
- Amir D. Aczel, Pendulum: Léon Foucault and the Triumph of
Science, Washington Square Press, 2003, ISBN
0-7434-6478-8
- Umberto Eco, Foucault's Pendulum (trans. William
Weaver). Secker & Warburg, 1989.
- William Tobin, Perfecting the Modern Reflector. Sky
& Telescope, October 1987.
- William Tobin, Léon Foucault. Scientific American,
July 1998.
- William Tobin, The Life and Science of Léon Foucault: The
Man who Proved the Earth Rotates. Cambridge University Press,
2003. ISBN 0-521-80855-3
References
- ^
"Jean-Bertrand-Léon
Foucault". Catholic Encyclopedia. New
York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06156c.htm.
- ^
David Cassidy, Gerald Holton, James
Rutherford (2002). Understanding
Physics. Birkhäuser. ISBN 0387987568. http://books.google.com/books?id=rpQo7f9F1xUC&pg=PA382&dq=Foucault+speed-of-light+wave+theory&as_brr=3&ei=qhMTSbjcN5zOswOIhPG6DQ.
- ^
L. Foucault, "Description des procedes employes pour reconnaitre la
configuration des surfaces optiques" [Description of the methods
used to recognize the configuration of optical surfaces],
Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Academie des
Sciences, Paris, vol. 47, pages 958-959 (1858).
- ^
L. Foucault, "Mémoire sur la construction des télescopes en verre
argenté" [Memoir on the construction of reflecting telescopes],
Annales de l'Observatoire impériale de Paris, vol. 5,
pages 197-237 (1859).
- ^
W. Tobin, The Life and Science of Léon Foucault, Cambridge
University Press (2003).
External
links
Collected Works:
Other:
See also