William Francis Gray Swann

William Francis Gray Swann (18841962) was an Anglo-American physicist. He was educated at Brighton Technical College, the Royal College of Science, University College, Kings College and the City Guilds of London Institute. In 1913 he came to the United States and joined the Carnegie Institute, becoming head of the Physical Division of the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism. He later became a professor at the University of Minnesota, then at the University of Chicago and Yale. In 1927 at the age of 43, he became the director of the Bartol Research Foundation of the Franklin Institute in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. He continued in this capacity until his retirement. He is particularly noted for his research into cosmic rays and high-energy physics. He produced over 250 publications, including The Architecture of the Universe in 1934. In addition to being a physicist, he was also known as an accomplished cellist and he founded the Swarthmore Symphony Orchestra. He retired in 1959, and died in 1962 in Swarthmore. The Swann crater on the Moon is named after him.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
2005 in science
being ian
culham
the golden touch
zionist organization of america
alan freed (disambiguation)
wylfa
olive custance
the family cat
forum waffenrecht
nomothetic
wheelie
thornhill primary school
nomothetic and idiographic
height 611 ufo incident
uss stembel (dd 644)
wotsits
andrei rublev (movie)
science museum of minnesota
justiciable case
pavek museum of broadcasting
euanthe
activated sludge
euporie
eurydome
dina (musician)
maestoso
donald beardslee
tommy tee
norman kwong
the message (movie)
joseph duveen, 1st baron duveen of millbank
nikolaos zachariadis
harpalyke
lee strobel
the return of martin guerre
the navigator: a medieval odyssey
the virgin spring
outposts of tyranny
jeremy peat
siege of beirut
catalog
patty cannon
upper valley trails alliance