Please note that the copyright
to these pictures is held variously by the Department of Physics &
Astronomy at Manchester University, Robin Marshall and The Living Archive.
The marketing of copies of these archives is done by Frontiers
Science and Television Ltd. The pictures here are for viewing only
and may not be downloaded to a permanent file, copied, printed ot stored.
Former students and staff
who made a name for themselves:
1) J J Thomson. Study
and research 1871-76 (entered at age 14). Left and discovered the electron,
awarded Nobel prize.
2) J H Poynting. Student 1867-72 (one of the very first students in the new Physical Laboratories) Lecturer 1876-79. Left to become Professor at Mason College (which became Birmingham University).
3) C T R Wilson. Student 1884-87. Went to Cambridge, invented the expansion cloud chamber and was awarded Nobel prize.
4) E Rutherford. 1907-1919. Nobel prize 1908.
5) J Chadwick. Researcher 1910-11, got MSc. Left for Cambridge, discovered neutron and awarded Nobel prize.
6) H Geiger. Researcher 1910-14. Did the original "Rutherford scattering" experiment with Marsden. Devised ionisation counter.
7) N Bohr. Research Staff 1913-14. Worked on structure of atom. Awarded Nobel prize.
8) W L Bragg. Director 1919-1937. Nobel prize for X-ray crystallography, shared with Dad, 1915.
9) N Mott. Lecturer 1929-30. Left for Cambridge and then Professor at new University in Bristol. Awarded Nobel prize in 1977.
10) H Bethe. Research staff 1932. Left for Cornell. Awarded Nobel prize.
11) Douglas Hartree. 1929-1946. Built and operated a differential analyser to evaluate the wave functions of multi-electron atoms.
12) P M Blackett 1937-53. Director. Awarded Nobel prize for developing cloud chamber and confirming positron.
13) G D Rochester Discovered
strange particles in 1947 with C C Butler.
C C Butler co-discovered
strange particles in 1947. Went on to be head of dept at Imperial College
and then VC at Loughborough.
14) A Wolfendale. PhD 1954 in cosmic rays. Former Astronomer Royal.
15) Arthur Eddington. Graduated in 1902. Founder of modern Astronomy.
Among them, N Bohr,
E Rutherford, JJ Thomson, H Bethe, Alan Turing and A Eddington (including
John Dalton from UMIST) have been generally considered among the top 100
greatest scientists in human history. And Niels Bohr is normally ranked
third after Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein.
Picture A1. This is the nearest to the original print of Geiger and Rutherford that we have in the department. The original negative is lost and this is a sepia print off the original negative. This print in its frame was given to the department from the estate of Prof H Stansfield who was a fellow, demonstrator and lecturer in the dept from 1904-12.
Picture
A2.The
5th Solvay Conference was held in Brussels from 23-29 October 1927. I have
an original print of the delegates brought back from the conference by
W L Bragg. The group photo which is of very good quality, contains just
about everyone who was anyone during the golden age (except Rutherford
and W H Bragg).
In the photo:
Picture
A3. In 1962, there was a "Rutherford Jubilee Conference" held in our
department. The official photo of president, chairman and speakers shows
a young C Rubbia in the back row:
Picture
A4. This picture shows Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, (1811-99). Gustav Robert
Kirchhoff (1824-1897) together with Sir Henry Roscoe at Manchester University
in 1862. Three years previously, Bunsen had identified the elements Caesium
and Rubidium. Well known to schoolchildren for his law in electrical circuits,
Kirchhoff also was the first to determine that when elements are heated
to incandescance, they all emit spectra characteristic of the element.
This photo is in v good
condition. On the back is written in pencil "Three men. waite for title".
The caption on the photo says "Bunsen, Kirchhoff and Roscoe at Manchester
1862. When the photo was taken, Bunsen was 51 and Kirchhoff 38 and it is
certainly Bunsen in the middle. So I would appreciate confirmation of the
appearance of the other two please from anyone who knows what they looked
like!
Prof J von Krogh of Heidelberg
identifies the gentleman on the left as Robert Gustav Kirchhoff, Professor
der Physik, Universitaet Heidelberg, 1854-1875 and the gentelman in the
middle as the chemist Bunsen.
Picture A5. Holiday in Scotland. Front row: Otto Darbishire (lecturer) Eileen Rutherford, Cary Schuster, Sybil Schuster, Ernest Rutherford. Back row: Norah Schuster, Unknown, Unknown.
Picture A6. This photo was taken in the Manchester Physics department during the 1903 British Association meeting held in Southport.
Picture
1. Manchester HEP 5-a-side soccer team in 1965
l to r: Robin Marshall,
Mike Ibbotson, Tony Harckham, Roger Templeman, Alf Wentworth
Picture
2. Mike Ibbotson, George Tipler and Paul Murphy 1966.
Picture
3. Andreas Kanaris 1966
Life in the lab in 1966
Picture
4. Some of the HEP
group in the lab 1966.
Mike Albrow (now at Fermilab)
2nd left
Picture
5. More of the HEP group in the lab 1966. Edna Murphy centre
Picture
6. Max Hayton and Mike Albrow.
The HEP Group's 5-a-side soccer team in action
Picture
7. Bad temper between Pete Cockburn(?) and Roger Templeman
Picture
8. Robin Marshall takes a shot through colleague Wentworth's legs
Picture
9. 1966 and another goal for HEP (Robin Marshall).
SLAC computer guru Les
Cottrell is 2nd left.
Some famous oldies
Picture
10. Ernest Rutherford and Picture
11. Hans Geiger
in the Schuster lab in
about 1912
Picture
12. Paul Murphy and Les Bird, at Daresbury in 1967
Picture
13. Roger Templeman and Robin Marshall, 1967