William Nicol
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William Nicol (1770 - 1851) was a Scottish physicist and geologist who invented the first device for obtaining plane-polarized light - the Nicol prism - in 1828. He was born in 1770 in Humbie (East Lothian), not 1768 as previously thought[citation needed].
Nothing is known of his early history beyond the fact that, after amassing a small competence as a popular lecturer on natural philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, he settled in Edinburgh to live a very retired life. He conducted extensive studies of fluid inclusions in crystals and the microscopic structure of fossil wood.[1] He did not publish any of his research findings until 1826.
Nicol made his prism by bisecting a parallelepiped of Iceland spar (a naturally occurring, transparent crystalline form of calcium carbonate) along its shortest diagonal, then cementing the two halves together with Canada balsam. Light entering the prism is refracted into two rays, one of which emerges as plane-polarized light. Nicol prisms greatly facilitated the study of refraction and polarization, and were later used to investigate molecular structures and optical activity of organic compounds.
In 1815, Nicol developed a method of preparing extremely thin sections of crystals and rocks for microscopical study. His technique (which involved cementing the specimen to a glass slide and then carefully grinding until it was extremely thin) made it possible to view mineral samples by transmitted rather than reflected light and therefore enabled the minerals' internal structures to be seen.
He died at Edinburgh on the September 2, 1851, and was buried in Warriston Cemetery. His burial site is now marked by a plaque on the north wall.
Dorsum Nicol on the Moon is named after him.
[edit] References
- ^ This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.