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         Wilson Charles Thomson Rees:     more detail
  1. Reminiscences of my early years (Notes and records of the Royal Society of London) by Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 1960
  2. On an expansion apparatus for making visible the tracks of ionising particles in gases and some results obtained by its use by Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 1912
  3. On a method of making visible the paths of ionising particles through a gas by Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 1911
  4. On the comparative efficiency as condensation nuclei of positively and negatively charged ions by Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, 1900
  5. An atlas of typical expansion chamber photographs: Atlas typischer Nebelkammerbilder. Atlas de photographies de chambre de Wilson by Wolfgang Gentner, 1954
  6. Atlas typischer nebelkammerbilder: Mit einfuhrung in die Wilsonsche methode (German Edition) by Wolfgang Gentner, H. Maier-Leibnitz, et all 1940

41. Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (February 14, 1869 November 15, 1959) was a Scottish physicist. He was born in the parish of Glencorse, Midlothian to a farmer, John Wilson, and his
http://www.scientific-web.com/en/Physics/Biographies/CharlesThomsonReesWilson.ht
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson Charles Thomson Rees Wilson ( February 14 November 15 was a Scottish physicist.
He was born in the parish of Glencorse, Midlothian to a farmer, John Wilson, and his mother Annie Clerk Harper. After his father died in 1873, his family moved to Manchester. He was educated at Owen's College, studying biology with the intent to become a physician. He then went to Cambridge University where he became interested in physics and chemistry.
He thereafter became particularly interested in meteorology, and in 1893 he began to study clouds and their properties. He worked for some time at the observatory on Ben Nevis, where he made observations of cloud formation. He then tried to reproduce this effect on a smaller scale in the laboratory in Cambridge, expanding humid air within a sealed container. He later experimented with the creation of cloud trails in his chamber caused by ions and radiation. For the invention of the cloud chamber he received the Nobel Prize in
He married Jessie Fraser in 1908, the daughter of a minister from Glasgow, and the couple had four children. He died near Edinburgh, surrounded by his family.

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