Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

John Ambrose Fleming

created by rycerice

(person) by rycerice (1.3 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Sat Oct 20 2001 at 17:30:31

In 1849, when Ambrose Fleming was born in the manse of a Congregational minister in Lancaster, England, the telegraph was only five years old. By the time of his dead nearly a hundred years later, in 1945, Fleming's invention originally known as Fleming's Valve had ushered in the age of radio and television.

When Ambrose was four, his father accepted a call to a new Church in London. In the ensuing years, the boy dabbed in electricity and magnetism and came under the spell of Michael Faraday's famous science lectures for children at the Royal Institution. Later, spurred by Faraday's example to become a scientist, he pursued scientific studies at the University College, London, and obtained his bachelor's degree in 1870. In 1877, after teaching science for a time, Fleming won admission to St. John's College, Cambridge University, where he could sit at the feet of the brilliant physicist James Clerk Maxwell. Fleming became one of Maxwell's star pupils and was often the only student attending Maxwell's lectures. Of Maxwell, Fleming later commented: "He saw so much deeper into scientific problems than ordinary persons that his utterances often appeared obscure." Fleming joined Maxwell's research staff at the Cavendish Laboratory and designed a special version of the Wheatstone bridge for accurately comparing standards of resistance. Maxwell promptly dubbed the device "Fleming's banjo."

In 1879, Fleming earned his doctorate in science at London University. After serving for a short time as a professor of mathematics and physics, he became a consultant to the fledgling Edison Electric Light Company. Then in, 1885, he became the first professor of the new science of electrical engineering at his alma mater, University College, London, where he served for forty-one years. He often quipped that the only equipment in the electrical engineering department when he began consisted of a blackboard and a piece of chalk! (CHEAP!) During these years, he conducted notable research in many fields, particularly in the study of properties of materials at the low temperatures and in photometry (the measurement of light intensity).

Some years later, Fleming began investigating the strange phenomenon known as the Edison effect. He soon developed a vacuum tube that could change, or rectify, high-frequency alternating current into direct current. This device, which he called a thermionic diode, was patented in 1904. Because of this invention, Fleming undoubtedly must be credited as among that handful of men who launched the electronic age.

In 1929, Fleming was knighted by King George V of Great Britain for his scientific achievements, and Dr. Fleming became Sir John Ambrose Fleming.

A Timeline of Fleming's life
1849 born in Lancaster, England
1870 receives his B.Sc degree
1877 begins graduate studies under Maxwell
1879 receives his D.Sc degree
1885 becomes a professor of electrical engineering
1901 helps Marconi transmit transatlantic wireless signals
1904 patents the thermionic diode
1929 knighted by the king
1930s helps start the Evolution Protest Movement;writes books opposing evolution
1945 dies in Sidmouth, England


printable version
chaos

Lee De Forest Edwin Howard Armstrong St. John's College vacuum tube
George V Fleming
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help

Cool Staff Picks
Nodes your sibling would have liked:
24
Oh boner, you didn't whiz on Old Glory, did you?
Civil defense for your refrigerator
My New Life in Another Country
July 30, 2003
Alice's Restaurant
Elephant
Mad World, or my weekend in Afghanistan
The Hellfire Club
reading Japanese
I had a brother, once
Finnish proverbs
Phineas Gage
New Writeups
BookReader
Fear the Cold(dream)
Pavlovna
Kathleen MacInnes(person)
stainedglass
1(fiction)
kalen
Three "T"s(idea)
octillion369
Undead(idea)
archiewood
Ico(fiction)
Heisenberg
Why I love Everything2(log)
octillion369
Death Knight(person)
XWiz
Are you hoping for a miracle?(review)
santo
The Host(review)
LostPsion
"Shut the Fuck Up" Theaters(idea)
beatrice
You've been slowly taking me over for nearly a year, do you know that?(idea)
Berek
YouTube(thing)
shaogo
How to Pretend to Have a Job(idea)
hapax
Les Provinciales(review)
This affordable entertainment brought to you by The Everything Development Company