James Clerk Maxwell
Born: 13 June 1831 in Edinburgh, Scotland
Died: 5 Nov 1879 in Cambridge,
Cambridgeshire, England
James Clerk Maxwell was born at 14 India
Street in Edinburgh, a house built by his parents in the 1820s, but
shortly afterwards his family moved to their home at Glenlair in
Kirkcudbrightshire about 20 km from Dumfries. There he enjoyed a country
upbringing and his natural curiosity displayed itself at an early age.
In a letter written on 25 April 1834 when 'The Boy' was not yet three
years old he is described as follows, see [4]:-
He is a very happy man, and has improved much
since the weather got moderate; he has great work with doors, locks,
keys etc., and 'Show me how it doos' is never out of his mouth. He
also investigates the hidden course of streams and bell-wires, the way
the water gets from the pond through the wall and a pend or small
bridge and down a drain ...
When James was eight years old his mother died. His
parents plan that they would educate him at home until he was 13 years
old, and that he would then be able to go the Edinburgh University, fell
through. A 16 year old boy was hired to act as tutor but the arrangement
was not a successful one and it was decided that James should attend the
Edinburgh Academy.
James, together with his family, arrived at 31 Heriot Row, the house of
Isabella Wedderburn his father's sister, on 18 November 1841. He
attended Edinburgh Academy where he had the nickname 'Dafty'. P G
Tait, although almost the same age, was one class below James.
Tait, who would become a close school friend and friend for life,
described Maxwell's school days [39]:-
At school he was at first regarded as shy and
rather dull. he made no friendships and spent his occasional holidays
in reading old ballads, drawing curious diagrams and making rude
mechanical models. This absorption in such pursuits, totally
unintelligible to his schoolfellows, who were then totally ignorant of
mathematics, procured him a not very complimentary nickname. About the
middle of his school career however he surprised his companions by
suddenly becoming one of the most brilliant among them, gaining prizes
and sometimes the highest prizes for scholarship, mathematics, and
English verse.
In early 1846 at the age of 14, Maxwell wrote a paper
on ovals. In this work he generalized the definition of an
ellipse by
defining the
locus of a
point where the sum of m times the distance from one fixed point
plus n times the distance from a second fixed point is constant.
If m = n = 1 then the curve is an ellipse. Maxwell also
defined curves where there were more than two foci. This became his
first paper On the description of oval curves, and those having a
plurality of foci which was read to the
Royal Society of Edinburgh on 6 April
1846. These ideas were not entirely new as
Descartes had defined such curves before but the work was remarkable
for a 14 year old.
Maxwell was not dux of the Edinburgh Academy, this
honor going to Lewis Campbell who later became the professor of Greek
at the University of St Andrews. Lewis Campbell was a close friend of
Maxwell's and he wrote the biography [3] and its second edition [4].
These biographies make fascinating reading filled with personal
memories.
At the age of 16, in November 1847, Maxwell entered
the second Mathematics class taught by
Kelland, the natural philosophy (physics) class taught by Forbes and
the logic class taught by
William Hamilton.
Tait, also at the University of Edinburgh, later wrote in the
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1879-80) [4]:-
The winter of 1847 found us together in
the classes of Forbes and
Kelland, where he highly distinguished himself. With the former
he was a particular favourite, being admitted to the free use of the
class apparatus for original experiments. ... During this period he
wrote two valuable papers which are published in our Transactions, on
The Theory of Rolling Curves and The Equilibrium of Elastic Solids.
The University of Edinburgh still has a record of
books that Maxwell borrowed to take home while an undergraduate. These
include
Cauchy, Calcul Differentiel
Fourier, Theorie de la Chaleur
Monge, Géometrie Descriptive
Newton, Optics
Poisson, Mechanics
Taylor, Scientific Memoirs
Willis, Principles of Mechanism
Maxwell went to Peterhouse Cambridge in October 1850
but moved to Trinity where he believed that it was easier to obtain a
fellowship. Again we quote
Tait's article in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of
Edinburgh (1879-80):-
... he brought to Cambridge in the autumn of
1850, a mass of knowledge which was really immense for so young a
man, but in a state of disorder appalling to his methodical private
tutor. Though the tutor was William Hopkins, the pupil to a great
extent took his own way, and it may safely be said that no high
wrangler
of recent years ever entered the Senate-house more imperfectly trained
to produce 'paying' work than did Clerk Maxwell. But by sheer strength
of intellect, though with the very minimum of knowledge how to use it
to advantage under the conditions of the Examination, he obtained the
position of Second Wrangler, and was bracketed equal with the Senior
Wrangler, in the higher ordeal of the Smith's Prizes.
Thomson [39] describes Maxwell's undergraduate days:-
... Scholars dined together at one table. This
brought Maxwell into daily contact with the most intellectual set in
the College, among whom were many who attained distinction in later
life. These in spite of his shyness and some eccentricities recognized
his exceptional powers. ... The impression of power which Maxwell
produced on all he met was remarkable; it was often much more due to
his personality than to what he said, for many found it difficult to
follow him in his quick changes from one subject to another, his
lively imagination started so many hares that before he had run one
down he was off on another.
Maxwell obtained his fellowship and graduated with a
degree in mathematics from Trinity College in 1854. The First Wrangler
in that year was Edward
Routh, who as well as being an excellent mathematician was a genius
at mastering the cramming methods required to succeed in the Cambridge
Tripos of that time. Maxwell remained at Cambridge where he took pupils,
then was awarded a Fellowship by Trinity to continue work.
One of Maxwell's most important achievements was his
extension and mathematical formulation of Michael Faraday's theories of
electricity and magnetic lines of force. His paper On Faraday's lines
of force was read to the Cambridge Philosophical Society in two
parts, 1855 and 1856. Maxwell showed that a few relatively simple
mathematical equations could express the behavior of electric and
magnetic fields and their interrelation.
However, in early 1856, Maxwell's father became ill
and Maxwell wanted to be able to spend more time with him. He therefore
tried to obtain an appointment in Scotland, applying for the post of
Professor of Natural Philosophy at Marischal College in Aberdeen when
Forbes told him it was vacant. Maxwell traveled to Edinburgh for the
Easter vacation of 1856 to be with his father and the two went together
to Glenlair. On 3 April his father died and, shortly after, Maxwell
returned to Cambridge as he had planned. Before the end of April he
learnt that he had been appointed to the chair at Marischal College.
In November 1856 Maxwell took up the appointment in
Aberdeen. When the subject announced by St John's College Cambridge for
the Adams Prize of 1857 was The Motion of Saturn's Rings Maxwell
was immediately interested. Maxwell and
Tait had thought about the problem of Saturn's rings in 1847 while
still pupils at the Edinburgh Academy. Maxwell decided to compete for
the prize and his research at Aberdeen in his first two years was taken
up with this topic. He showed that stability could be achieved only if
the rings consisted of numerous small solid particles, an explanation
now confirmed by the Voyager spacecraft. In a letter to Lewis Campbell,
written on 28 August 1857, while he was at Glenlair, Maxwell wrote:-
I have effected several breaches in the solid
ring, and now am splash into the fluid one, amid a clash of symbols
truly astounding. When I reappear it will be in the dusky ring, which
is something like the siege of Sebastopol conducted from a forest of
guns 100 miles one way, and 30,000 miles the other, and
the shot never to stop, but go spinning away round a circle, radius
170,000 miles...
Maxwell's essay won him the Adams Prize and
Airy wrote:-
It is one of the most remarkable applications of
mathematics to physics that I have ever seen.
Maxwell became engaged to marry Katherine Mary Dewar
in February 1858 and they married in June 1859. Despite the fact that he
was now married to the daughter of the Principal of Marischal College,
in 1860, when Marischal College and King's College combined, Maxwell, as
the junior of the department, had to seek another post. His scientific
work, however, had been proceeding with great success.
Stokes had written to him on 7 November 1857:-
I have just received your papers on the
dynamical top, etc., and the account of experiments on the perception
of color. The latter, which I missed seeing at the time when it was
published, I have just read with great interest. The results afford
most remarkable and important evidence in favour of the theory of
three primary color-perceptions, a theory which you, and you alone,
as far as I know, have established on an exact numerical basis.
When the Chair of Natural Philosophy at Edinburgh
became vacant in 1859, Forbes having moved to St Andrews, it seemed that
fate had smiled on Maxwell to bring him back to his home town. He asked
Faraday to act as a referee for him, in a letter written on 30 November
1859. Many of Maxwell's friends were also applicants for this post
including
Tait and
Routh. Maxwell lost out to
Tait despite his outstanding scientific achievements. When the
Edinburgh paper, the Courant, reported the result it noted that:-
Professor Maxwell is already acknowledged to be
one of the most remarkable men known to the scientific world.
The reason he was not appointed must have been those
given by the paper when they wrote:-
... there is another quality which is desirable
in a Professor in a University like ours and that is the power of oral
exposition proceeding on the supposition of imperfect knowledge or
even total ignorance on the part of pupils.
The claim that he was not the best person to teach
poorly qualified pupils may have been a fair one but it is certainly not
the case that he was a poor lecturer.
Stokes wrote in 1854 that he had:-
... once been present when [Maxwell]
was giving an account of his geometrical researches to the Cambridge
Philosophical Society, on which occasion I was struck with the
singularly lucid manner of his exposition.
Again Fleming, who had attended Maxwell's lectures,
expressed similar thoughts [19]:-
Maxwell in short had too much learning and too
much originality to be at his best in elementary teaching. For those
however who could follow him his teaching was a delight.
In 1860 Maxwell was appointed to the vacant chair of
Natural Philosophy at King's College in London. The six years that
Maxwell spent in this post were the years when he did his most important
experimental work. The duties of the post were more demanding than those
at Aberdeen. Campbell writes in [3]:-
There were nine months of lecturing in the year,
and evening lectures to artisans, etc., were recognised as a part of
the Professor's duties.
In London, around 1862, Maxwell calculated that the
speed of propagation of an electromagnetic field is approximately that
of the speed of light. He proposed that the phenomenon of light is
therefore an electromagnetic phenomenon. Maxwell wrote the truly
remarkable words:-
We can scarcely avoid the conclusion that light
consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the
cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.
Maxwell also continued work he had begun at Aberdeen,
considering the kinetic theory of gases. By treating gases statistically
in 1866 he formulated, independently of Ludwig
Boltzmann, the Maxwell-Boltzmann
kinetic theory of gases. This theory showed that temperatures and heat
involved only molecular movement.
This theory meant a change from a concept of
certainty, heat viewed as flowing from hot to cold, to one of
statistics, molecules at high temperature have only a high probability
of moving toward those at low temperature. Maxwell's approach did not
reject the earlier studies of thermodynamics but used a better theory of
the basis to explain the observations and experiments.
Maxwell left King's College, London in the spring of
1865 and returned to his Scottish estate Glenlair. He made periodic
trips to Cambridge and, rather reluctantly, accepted an offer from
Cambridge to be the first Cavendish Professor of Physics in 1871. He
designed the Cavendish laboratory and helped set it up. The Laboratory
was formally opened on 16 June 1874.
The four
partial differential
equations, now known as Maxwell's equations, first appeared
in fully developed form in Electricity and Magnetism (1873). Most
of this work was done by Maxwell at Glenlair during the period between
holding his London post and his taking up the Cavendish chair. They are
one of the great achievements of 19th-century mathematics.
One of the tasks which occupied much of Maxwell's
time between 1874 and 1879 was his work editing Henry Cavendish's
papers. Cavendish, see [13]:-
... published only two papers [and]
left twenty packages of manuscript on mathematical and experimental
electricity. ... Maxwell entered upon this work with the utmost
enthusiasm: he saturated his mind with the scientific literature of
Cavendish's period; he repeated many of his experiments, and copied
out the manuscript with his own hand. ... The volume entitled The
Electrical Researches of the Honorable Henry Cavendish was published
in 1879, and is unequalled as a chapter in the history of
electricity.
Fleming attended Maxwell's last lecture course at
Cambridge. He writes [19]:-
During the last term in May 1879
Maxwell's health evidently began to fail, but he continued to give his
lectures up to the end of the term. ... To have enjoyed even a brief
personal acquaintance with Professor Maxwell and the privilege of his
oral instruction was in itself a liberal education, nay more, it was
an inspiration, because everything he said or did carried the
unmistakable mark of a genius which compelled not only the highest
admiration but the greatest reverence as well.
Maxwell returned with his wife, who was also ill, to
Glenlair for the summer. His health continued to deteriorate and he
suffered much pain although remained remarkably cheerful. On 8 October
1879 he returned with his wife to Cambridge but, by this time he could
scarcely walk. One of the greatest scientists the world has known passed
away on 5 November. His doctor, Dr Paget, said:-
No man ever met death more consciously or more
calmly
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