George Downing Liveing
English chemist and spectroscopist
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, George Downing Liveing FRS was an English chemist and spectroscopist. Early life He was born in Nayland, Suffolk, the eldest son of Dr. Edward Liveing and Catherine Mary Downing . Academic career Liveing was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, completing a BA in the Mathematical Tripos in 1850 and then postgraduate study for the Natural Sciences Tripos, in which he obtained distinction in chemistry and mineralogy; he received a MA in 1853. Later in his life he was awarded an Honorary ScD in 1908. In 1853 St John's College founded for him a College Lectureship in Chemistry and built for his use a Chemical Laboratory behind New Court. He was a Fellow of the college until he married in 1860 but he retained his lectureship there until 1865 and in 1911 was elected as its President, a position that he held until his death in 1924. Following the death of James Cumming in 1861, Liveing was elected to the 1702 Chair of Chemistry at Cambridge University, at an initial salary of £100 per annum and from 1860 to 1880 he held additional posts at the Staff College, Camberley and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst as Professor of Chemistry. He retired in 1908 at the age of 81. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1879 and was awarded the Society's Davy Medal in 1901 "for his contributions to spectroscopy". Liveing collaborated with James Dewar, who was Jacksonian Professor of Natural Philosophy at Cambridge from 1875 to 1923. Together they published 78 papers on spectroscopic topics.
George Downing Liveing's Published Works
Published Works
- II. On the influence of pressure on the spectra of flames (1892) (10)
- II. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours (6)
- VI. Notes on the absorption-spectra of oxygen and some of its compounds (6)
- V. On the spectra of sodium and potassium (5)
- I. On the spectra of the compounds of carbon with hydrogen and nitrogen (5)
- IV. Investigations on the spectrum of magnesium. No. II (5)
- Collected Papers on Spectroscopy (3)
- V. On the origin of the hydrocarbon flame spectrum (3)
- XXII. On the spectral lines of the metals developed by exploding gases (1884) (3)
- II. Quantitative spectroscopic experiments (3)
- III. On the ultra-violet spectra of the elements.—Part I. Iron (with a map) (3)
- III. On the identity of spectral lines of different elements (2)
- Chemical equilibrium : the result of the dissipation of energy (2)
- The Artificial Spectrum Top (1894) (2)
- IV. On the spectra of magnesium and lithium (2)
- On the Spectrum of the Oxy-Hydrogen Flame (2)
- VIII. Note on the spectra of the flames of some metallic compounds (2)
- XII. General observations on the spectra of carbon and its compounds (2)
- VI. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours (2)
- II. Note on the reversal of hydrogen lines; and on the outburst of hydrogen lines when water is dropped into the arc (2)
- XV. On the spectrum of water (2)
- LIQUID OXYGEN. (2)
- IV. Note on the unknown chromospheric substance of young (1)
- V. Note on a new form of direct vision spectroscope (1)
- II. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours (1)
- On the Spectrum of Carbon (1)
- II. Note on the reversal of the spectrum of cyanogen (1)
- XLI.Note onPlücker'ssupposed detection of the line-spectrum of hydrogen in the oxyhydrogen flame (1892) (1)
- XI. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours (1)
- On the Separation of the Least Volatile Gases of Atmospheric Air, and their Spectra (1901) (1)
- III. Investigations on the spectrum of magnesium (1)
- XII. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours. No. VIII. (iron, titanium, chromium, and aluminium.) (1)
- I. Notes on the absorption of ultra-violet rays by various substances (1)
- II. On the spectrum of water. No. II (1)
- On the spectrum of the more volatile gases of atmospheric air, which are not condensed at the temperature of liquid hydrogen.—Preliminary notice (1)
- PETITION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE. (1888) (0)
- VI. Note on a direct vision spectroscope after Thollon's plan adapted to laboratory use, and capable of giving exact measurements (0)
- III. On the spectrum of carbon (0)
- III. On the ultra-violet spectra of the elements. Part III. Cobalt and nickel (0)
- II On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours. No. IV (0)
- II. The spectroscopic properties of dust (0)
- On the Ultra-Violet Spectra of the Elements. Part III. Cobalt and Nickel. [Abstract] (0)
- III. On the disappearance of some spectral lines and the variations of metallic spectra due to mixed vapours (0)
- III. Spectroscopic studies on gaseous explosions. No. I (0)
- II. On the spectrum of the oxyhydrogen flame (0)
- VII. Note on 'spectroscopic papers' (0)
- On the Ultra-Violet Spectra of the Elements. Part I. Iron. [Abstract] (0)
- II. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours. No. V (0)
- On the Spectrum of Carbon (0)
- VI. On the spectra of the compounds of carbon with hydrogen and nitrogen. No. II (0)
- V. Note on the history of the carbon spectrum (0)
- Spherical Eggs (0)
- Ill. Note on the order of reversibility of the lithium lines (0)
- XI. On the ultra-violet spectra of the elements. Part I. Iron (0)
- On the probable presence the Sun of the newly discovered gases of the Earths Atmosphere (0)
- Preliminary Report of the Newall Telescope Syndicate (1889) (0)
- X. On an arrangement of the electric arc for the study of the radiation of vapours, together with preliminary results (0)
- III. On the reversal of the lines of metallic vapours. No. VI (0)
- The University of Cambridge (1897) (0)
- LVIII.On sun-spots and terrestrial elements in the sun (1883) (0)
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