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Joseph John Thomson (1856 –1940)

Image credit: The Royal Institution

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J. J. Thomson was an influential physicist, both for his own research, for which he won the Nobel Prize, and for the work he did to establish the Cavendish Laboratory at Cambridge as a major research school. He began his career studying the theory of electricity which built on the work of James Clerk Maxwell. In 1897 he discovered the particle later named the electron, the existence of which was first announced at a Friday Evening Discourse at the Royal Institution (Ri). Thereafter he worked on developing a theory of matter. Thomson won the Nobel Prize in 1906 for his studies of electrical conduction through gases, which he began following Wilhelm Roentgen's discovery of X-rays in 1895. Thomson was appointed a Professor of the Royal Institution in 1905 and remained associated with the Ri for the rest of his life.

The Royal Institution

London

Title

Joseph John Thomson (1856 –1940)

Date

1924

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 74 x W 61.5 cm

Accession number

RIIC 0642

Acquisition method

gift from Mrs de l'Hôpital, 1933

Work type

Painting

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The Royal Institution

21 Albermarle Street, London, Greater London W1S 4BS England

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