John William Strutt Rayleigh - definitie. Wat is John William Strutt Rayleigh
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Wat (wie) is John William Strutt Rayleigh - definitie

ENGLISH PHYSICIST (1842–1919)
John William Strutt; Lord Rayleigh; John William Strutt Rayleigh; John Rayleigh; John William Strutt, Lord Rayleigh; John William Strutt 3rd Baron Rayleigh; John William Rayleigh; JW Strutt; 3rd Baron Rayleigh; John Strutt, Lord Rayleigh; John William Strutt 3rd Baron of Terling Place; Lord Rayleigh, 3rd Baron of Terling Place; John Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh; J. W. Strutt
  • Vanity Fair]]'', 1899
  • ''Theory of sound'', 1894

Rayleigh, Kamloops         
NEIGHBOURHOOD IN KAMLOOPS, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA
Rayleigh, British Columbia
Rayleigh is a neighbourhood of Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada along Highway 5 (the Yellowhead Highway). It is located on the east side of the North Thompson River and south of the community of Heffley Creek.
Charles Hedley Strutt         
BRITISH POLITICIAN
Charles Strutt
Charles Hedley Strutt (18 April 1849 – 19 December 1926) was a British Conservative Party politician.
Edward Lisle Strutt         
  • Seat of League of Nations High Commissioner for the Free City of Danzig
BRITISH MOUNTAIN CLIMBER
Edward L. Strutt
Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Lisle Strutt, CBE, DSO (8 February 1874 – 7 July 1948) was a British soldier and mountaineer, and President of the Alpine Club from 1935 to 1938.Lieutenant-Colonel Edward Lisle Strutt After a distinguished military career he defended classical mountaineering against what he saw as unhelpful trends in the sport for speed.

Wikipedia

John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh

John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, (; 12 November 1842 – 30 June 1919) was a British mathematician and physicist who made extensive contributions to science. He spent all of his academic career at the University of Cambridge. Among many honours, he received the 1904 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his investigations of the densities of the most important gases and for his discovery of argon in connection with these studies." He served as president of the Royal Society from 1905 to 1908 and as chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1908 to 1919.

Rayleigh provided the first theoretical treatment of the elastic scattering of light by particles much smaller than the light's wavelength, a phenomenon now known as "Rayleigh scattering", which notably explains why the sky is blue. He studied and described transverse surface waves in solids, now known as "Rayleigh waves". He contributed extensively to fluid dynamics, with concepts such as the Rayleigh number (a dimensionless number associated with natural convection), Rayleigh flow, the Rayleigh–Taylor instability, and Rayleigh's criterion for the stability of Taylor–Couette flow. He also formulated the circulation theory of aerodynamic lift. In optics, Rayleigh proposed a well-known criterion for angular resolution. His derivation of the Rayleigh–Jeans law for classical black-body radiation later played an important role in the birth of quantum mechanics (see Ultraviolet catastrophe). Rayleigh's textbook The Theory of Sound (1877) is still used today by acousticians and engineers.