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The
increasing ethnic diversity of British society means it is
difficult to define what makes someone British. |
British
achievements.
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Sir Francis William Aston
Francis William
Aston (born Birmingham, September 1, 1877; died Cambridge, November 20,
1945) was a British physicist who won the 1922 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for his discovery, by means of his mass spectrograph, of isotopes, in a
large number of non-radioactive elements, and for his enunciation of the
whole-number rule".
In 1903 he won a scholarship to the University of Birmingham and it was
in his studies of electronic discharge tubes there that he discovered the
phenomenon now known as the Aston Dark Space. In 1909 he moved to the Cavendish
Laboratory in Cambridge on the invitation of J.J. Thomson and worked on
the identification of isotopes of the element neon. Returning to these studies
after the |
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First World War in
1919, he used a method of electromagnetic focusing to invent the mass spectrograph,
which rapidly allowed him to identify no fewer than 212 of the 287 naturally occurring
isotopes.
His work on isotopes also led to his formulation of the Whole Number Rule which
states that "the mass of the oxygen isotope being defined, all the other isotopes
have masses that are very nearly whole numbers," a rule that was used extensively
in the development of nuclear energy.
The lunar crater Aston was named in his honour.
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