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Peter
Guthrie Tait
Born: 28 April 1831 in Dalkeith,
Midlothian, Scotland
Died: 4 July 1901 in
Edinburgh, Scotland
Click the picture above
to see three larger pictures
P G Tait's
father was John Tait and his mother was Mary Ronaldson.
John Tait was a secretary to Walter Francis Scott, the
fifth duke of Buccleuch. Peter had two sisters and he
began his schooling in the Grammar School in Dalkeith.
However, when he was six years old his father died and
Peter, with his two sisters and his mother, moved to
Edinburgh to live with an uncle John Ronaldson. An
Edinburgh banker, John Ronaldson was nevertheless
interested in science, in particular in astronomy,
geology and with the newly invented photography. He soon
interested his young nephew Peter in these subjects and
it is fair to say that Peter's interest in science was a
direct consequence of his uncle's enthusiasm for the
sciences.
When the family
moved to Edinburgh Peter, of course, had to leave his
school in Dalkeith. He next attended a private school in
Circus Place Edinburgh, then in 1841, when he was ten
years old, he entered Edinburgh Academy. Lewis Campbell,
who later became the professor of Greek at the
University of St Andrews, and James Clerk
Maxwell
were one year above Tait at the Academy. In fact
Maxwell
was slightly younger than Tait so the difference of one
year certainly did not reflect their respective ages.
Tait was top of
his class in each one of his six years at Edinburgh
Academy. His early interests, however, were not in
science but rather in classics. By his fourth year at
the Academy mathematics had become his real love and
that was the subject in which he really excelled. In
1846 he was placed first in the mathematics section of
the Edinburgh Academical Club Prize which was no mean
achievement given that he beat Lewis Campbell, who was
placed second, and
Maxwell
who was placed third. In 1847, Tait's final year at
Edinburgh Academy,
Maxwell
had his revenge since he was placed first for the
Edinburgh Academical Club Prize with Tait second.
At the age of
16, in November 1847, Tait entered the University of
Edinburgh.
Maxwell
entered Edinburgh University at the same time at Tait
and together they attended the second mathematics class
taught by Kelland and the natural philosophy (physics)
class taught by James David Forbes. Tait remained at
Edinburgh University for only one year before entering
Peterhouse, Cambridge in 1848. There he was tutored by
William
Hopkins
through what was a remarkable undergraduate career. In
January 1852, at the age of twenty, he graduated as
senior Wrangler in the Mathematical Tripos. This means
that he was placed first among the First Class degrees
in mathematics awarded by Cambridge in that year. He was
also the first Smith's prizeman.
Maxwell
followed Tait to Peterhouse in 1850 but transferred to
Trinity where he believed that it was easier to obtain a
fellowship. Another fellow student and friend of Tait's
was William Steele who was in the same year as Tait and
graduated as Second Wrangler. Tait won a Fellowship at
Peterhouse and, in addition to coaching undergraduates
for the Tripos, he began to collaborate with Steele in
writing a text Dynamics of a particle. Tragically
Steele died before much progress had been made with
writing the book but Tait continued with the project and
generously published the book under their joint
authorship despite having written most of it himself. It
was published in 1856.
In September
1854 Tait took up an appointment as professor of
mathematics at Queen's College, Belfast. A number of the
colleagues and friends he made in Belfast were to have a
very significant effect on Tait's career. One of these
was Thomas Andrews and the two collaborated in
experiments to determine the density of ozone and also
the affects of passing electrical discharge through
oxygen and other gases. Tait had not been involved in
experimental work up to this time and it is certainly
due to the influence of Andrews that he added this
interest to his growing range of skills. This research
carried out with Andrews took Tait towards chemistry and
this was a subject he retained an interest in through
his career.
Another
friendship of real significance was that with
Hamilton.
Tait had read
Hamilton's
Lectures on
quaternions in 1853
while he was still at Cambridge but although the topic
fascinated him he was more taken up with physical
applications of mathematics at the time and did not
pursue the topic at that stage. Then in July 1858 Tait
read a paper by
Helmholtz
in Crelle's Journal on the motion of a perfect
fluid.
Helmholtz's
paper Über Integrale der hydrodynamischen Gleichungen,
welche den Wirbelbewegungen entsprechen began by
decomposing the motion of a perfect fluid into
translation, rotation and deformation. Tait saw that
using quaternions he could express the fluid velocity as
a "vector function". It was the physical insight which
Hamilton's
quaternion differential calculus then gave which
impressed Tait and he began to work hard developing a
physical theory.
Tait began to
correspond with
Hamilton
in August 1858 and, in reply to
Hamilton's
question as to how he had stated to work with
quaternions, Tait wrote to
Hamilton
on 7 December 1858 (see for example [6]):-
... it was
only in August last that I suddenly bethought me of
certain formulas I had admired years ago on page
610 of your Lectures - and I thought (and
still think) likely to serve my purpose
exactly. (The matter which more immediately
suggested this to me was a paper by
Helmholtz
in
Crelle's
Journal (Vol. LX) which I was reading in
July last as soon as we received it ... The title
(in German) I forget - but a manuscript
translation of my own which I now have beside me is
headed "Vortex motion" ... ).
If Tait's
friendship with
Hamilton
was to prove important for his future research, then
other friendships which Tait formed were important in
his family life. Two of his friends at Peterhouse were
sons of the Rev James Porter and through them Tait met
their sister, Margaret Archer Porter, who he married in
Belfast on 13 October 1857.
The Chair of
Natural Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh became
vacant in 1859, J D Forbes having moved to the
University of St Andrews. Tait was a candidate for the
chair but so was
Maxwell
who had been forced to seek another post when Marischal
College and King's College in Aberdeen combined.
Routh,
who had been First Wrangler at Cambridge in
Maxwell's
year, was also a candidate but the real competition was
always going to be between Tait and
Maxwell.
Tait won despite
Maxwell's
outstanding scientific achievements. When the Edinburgh
paper, the Courant, reported the result it noted
that Tait had been chosen in preference to
Maxwell
since:-
... 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
Tait was the better person to teach poorly qualified
pupils was certainly a fair one and, of course, Tait's
personality meant that he made a stronger impression on
the appointing committee rather than the much more
reserved
Maxwell.
B the time he
arrived in Edinburgh in 1860 Tait was making strong
contributions in applying
Hamilton's
quaternions. In the year he took up the chair of Natural
Philosophy at Edinburgh he published Quaternion
investigations connected with electro-dynamics and
magnetism in which he reworked
Helmholtz's
hydrodynamic- electromagnetic analogy in the language of
quaternions. As Epple writes in [10]:-
... not
only quaternion analysis profited from acquiring a
new. physical meaning. Quaternionic formulas also
helped to grasp physical situations which could be
described in terms of fluid motion more easily.
By 1863 when he
published Note on a quaternion transformation in
the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh,
Tait claimed that:-
... the
next grand extensions of mathematical physics will, in
all likelihood, be furnished by quaternions.
Hamilton
died in 1865 and Tait took over the crusade to give
quaternions a leading role in mathematical physics.
Among the many contributions he made to the topic we
should mention his two important texts Elementary
Treatise on Quaternions (1867), and Introduction
to Quaternions (1873).
Maxwell
was impressed by Tait's many works on physical
applications of quaternions and wrote in a letter to
William
Thomson
in 1871:-
You should
let the world know that the true source of
mathematical methods as applicable to physics is to be
found in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of
Edinburgh. The volume- surface- and line- integrals of
vectors and quaternions and their properties as in the
course of being worked out by Tait is worth all that
is going on in other seats of learning.
Despite his
intense work on quaternions, Tait was involved in many
other activities. In 1862 he had published joint work
with James A Wanklyn on electricity produced during
evaporation and during effervescence. Three years later
he published a paper on the motion of iron filings on a
vibrating plate which was subjected to a magnetic field.
In 1866 he started a joint project with the physicist
Balfour Stewart on heating a disk which was rapidly
rotating in a vacuum. This was a topic Tait came back to
on several occasions throughout his career. Then in 1867
he published, in addition to the treatise on quaternions,
his translation of
Helmholtz's
1858 article and also the Treatise on Natural
Philosophy for which he may be best known.
In 1861 Tait
had been working on a text on mathematical physics. His
friend William
Thomson
(later Lord Kelvin):-
... to my
great delight offered to join.
The two
intended to write a two volume work and Treatise on
Natural Philosophy (1867) was to be the first of the
volumes. However the second volume was never written.
The treatise, known as 'T & T', was written mainly by
Tait who seemed to find time despite his numerous other
activities, while
Thomson
found that his many other activities prevented him
finding as much time as Tait to work on the book.
Hamilton Dickson writes in [9]:-
The work
was epoch-making, and created a revolution in
scientific development. For the first time 'T & T', as
the authors called themselves, traced to
Newton
the concept of the 'conservation of energy' which was
just then obtaining recognition among physicists, and
they showed once and for all that 'energy' was the
fundamental physical entity and that its
'conservation' was its predominant and all-controlling
property.
We have already
detailed major achievements for Tait dated 1867 but
there is one further event of that year which we should
mention.
Helmholtz,
in his 1858 paper, described the theoretical behaviour
of vortex rings. He claimed that two interacting rings
would change size and velocity as they interacted but
would retain their ring shape. Tait verified
Helmholtz'
theoretical claims with experiments with smoke rings in
1867. He used two boxes each with a rubber diaphragm
which shot out white smoke rings when the diaphragm was
struck.
Thomson
wrote to
Helmholtz
on 22 January 1867:-
... a few
days ago Tait showed me in Edinburgh a magnificent way
of producing [vortex rings]. We
sometimes can make one ring shoot through another,
illustrating perfectly your description; when one ring
passes near another, each is much disturbed, and is
seen to be in a state of violent vibration for a few
seconds, till it settles again into its circular form.
... The vibrations make a beautiful subject for
mathematical work.
These
experiments were to have a major influence on
Thomson
who saw the permanence of form as a possible explanation
for atoms and therefore explain the way that the
different elements could be built. Tait was not
convinced by
Thomson's
idea at first, rightly so of course since, although a
beautiful idea, it is quite wrong. The idea led Tait,
Thomson
and
Maxwell
to begin to work on
knot
theory since the basic
building blocks, in
Thomson's
vortex atom theory, would be the rings knotted in three
dimensions. By
Helmholtz'
theory of a perfect fluid, these knotted rings, although
they could be distorted, would retain the 'same knot' as
a circular knotted piece of string that can be moved
around yet the form of the knot remains an invariant.
Tait,
Thomson
and
Maxwell
exchanged letters in which they invented many
topological ideas as they looked at knots. Soon they
discovered
Listing's
1847 contributions to knot theory. Tait, although at
first unconvinced by
Thomson's
vortex atom theory, began to include the theory in his
lecture courses at Edinburgh in the early 1870s and he
gave popular lectures describing the theory. In 1876
Tait began an intense study of knots, attempting to
classify them. He published seven papers on knots in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in
the academic year 1876-77.
Tait considered
alternating knots, namely those which when traversing
the projection in 2-dimensional space the crossings go
alternately over and under. He labelled the n
crossings of such a knot A, B, C,
... and then the knot would be described by the sequence
of crossings of length 2n where each of A,
B, C, ... occurred exactly twice when the
knot was traversed. There were then two basic problems
to solve. Firstly which sequences of the above type
corresponded to a knot, and secondly how could it be
determined when two knots described by such sequences
were the same.
Without any
rigorous theory, which would have been well beyond
nineteenth century mathematics, Tait began to classify
knots using his mathematical and geometrical intuition.
By 1877 he had classified all knots with seven crossings
but he stopped there. One of the problems he considered
after that was the colouring of graphs since he claimed
to have a correct proof of the four colour theorem. His
proof is fallacious and, sadly, he did not relate
colouring of graphs to the knot theory he had considered
a few years earlier. Another topic which he had worked
on over a number of years was the results of the
Challenger expedition on deep sea temperatures. In 1881
Tait published an important paper on the topic in which
he showed how to correct the temperature readings
because of the high pressures on the thermometers.
He returned to
the topic of knots in his address to the
Edinburgh Mathematical Society
in 1883:-
We find
that it becomes a mere question of skilled labour to
draw all the possible knots having any assigned number
of crossings. The requisite labour increases with
extreme rapidity as the number of crossings is
increased. ... I have not been able to find time to
carry out this process further than the knots with
seven crossings. ... It is greatly desired that
someone, with the requisite leisure, should try to
extend this list, if possible up to 11 ...
Kirkman
read the text of Tait's address and began to work on
classifying knots with more than seven crossings. He
sent Tait his results on knot projections with up to
nine crossings in May 1884 but he had not looked at the
problem of deciding which of the projections led to
equivalent knots. Tait worked on this side of the
problem and, considering only alternating knots, solved
the equivalence problems within a few weeks. Tait seemed
to know how to tell whether two knots were equivalent
without rigorous methods. He states this quite clearly
in the paper he wrote tabulating the knots where he says
that his methods have:-
... the
disadvantage of being to a greater or less extent
tentative. Not that the rules laid down ... leave any
room for mere guessing, but they are too complex to be
always completely kept in view. Thus we cannot be
absolutely certain that by means of such processes we
have obtained all the essentially different forms
which the definition we employ comprehends.
Despite the
problems Tait knew exactly what he was doing for,
remarkably, his tables are correct. When Kirkman sent
him all knot projections with 10 crossings in January
1885 again Tait found all in equivalent knots. The
tables were printed in September 1885 and again they are
completely correct. By then he had received from Kirkman
1581 knot projections with 11 crossings and this time
Tait felt that he did not have the time to solve the
equivalence problem for these.
It would be
quite impossible in an article of this length to cover
all the topics which Tait worked on. Knott [6] lists 365
papers and 22 books written by Tait. We will mention two
final topics which he worked on after ending his work on
knots.
Thomson
suggested that he work on the kinetic theory of gases
and between 1886 and 1892 Tait published more than 20
papers on the topic. In this work he gave what
Thomson
considered the first proof of the Waterston-Maxwell
equipartition theorem.
Tait also wrote
a classic paper on the trajectory of golf balls (1896).
The subject of golf was one of great interest to Tait.
Of his four sons, the third was Frederick Guthrie Tait.
He became the leading amateur golfer in 1893 and won the
Open Golf Championship in 1896 and again in 1898.
Freddie Tait, as he was known in the golfing world, has
a street in St Andrews named after him which is not far
from my [EFR] home. Freddie was a military man in the
Black Watch. He gave up his golf when he volunteered to
serve in the Boer War in 1899. He was wounded at
Magersfontein on 19 December 1899 and killed during
fighting at Koodoosberg on 7 February 1900.
A deeply
religious man, Tait wrote, with the physicist Balfour
Stewart, The Unseen Universe (1875):-
... to
overthrow materialism by a purely scientific argument.
Because of the
public demand, he wrote a sequel Paradoxical
Philosophy (1878).
We have painted
a very positive picture of Tait in the details we have
given above. This is right for he deserves no less.
However there was another side to his character which we
should mention. He became involved in many arguments
with his fellow scientists and at least twice engaged in
very public arguments. Tait was prone to let his heart
rule his head in such situations and he often came of
worse in the scientific debate. One of his disputes was
with
Heaviside
and
Gibbs
whose vector methods he argued vigorously against over a
long period. Certainly Tait came off worst in this
arguments, perhaps his heart was too set on quaternionic
methods to allow his head to see the importance of the
ideas of
Heaviside
and
Gibbs.
Another bitter
dispute was with
Clausius
and Tyndall. Tait was patriotic to the extent that he
would let such considerations prejudice his view of
science. The dispute began over who was the first to
propose the equivalence of work and heat. Tait and
Tyndall began an argument over whether Joule or Julius
Robert Mayer von Mayer had priority. Tait wrote a highly
prejudiced account of the history of thermodynamics
which was stupidly pro-British and Tyndall was right to
be offended. Now
Hopkins
stumbled into the controversy when Tyndall had asked him
to send him all von Mayer's papers but then he was as
pro-German as Tait was pro-British when he published an
article in 1868 stating that not only did von Mayer have
priority but so did the German nation. A more bitter
dispute between Tait and
Clausius
began in 1872 when
Maxwell
published his Theory of Heat.
Clausius
stated that the British were trying to claim more than
they deserved for the theory of heat which, given Tait's
writing, was a fair comment.
Maxwell,
however, had over a number of years fully recognised
Clausius's
contribution, unlike Tait with his prejudiced approach.
Of course
Tait's patriotism also meant that he was a devoted
supporter of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh
which he served faithfully from the time he was elected
a Fellow shortly after being appointed to the chair in
Edinburgh. He served the Society as General Secretary
for 22 years from 1879 until 1901. He won the Gunning
Victoria Jubilee Prize and twice the Keith prize from
that Society. Although never elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society of London,
he did have the distinction of receiving that Society's
Royal Medal in 1886. Other honours given to Tait
included the award of honorary degrees by the University
of Glasgow and the University of Ireland, as well as
being elected to honorary membership of the academies of
Denmark, Holland, Sweden and Ireland.
At a ceremony
in Peterhouse to present a portrait of Tait,
Lord Kelvin
spoke of his friend:-
I remember
Tait once remarking that nothing but science is worth
living for. It was sincerely said, but Tait himself
proved it to be not true. Tait was a great reader. He
would get Shakespeare, Dickens, and Thackeray off by
heart. His memory was wonderful. What he once read
sympathetically he ever after remembered. Thus he was
always ready with delightful quotations, and these
brightened our hours of work. For we did heavy
mathematical work, stone breaking was not in it.
In [3] he is
described as follows:-
His
familiar figure was marked by a certain eccentricity,
or carelessness of dress, and some of his intimate
friends can scarcely remember ever to have seen him in
a dress suit. Dining out was indeed an abomination in
his eyes, unless it were informally in the company of
one or two kindred spirits.
Article by: J J O'Connor and E F
Robertson
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