Sheila Tinney
Sheila Christina Tinney (née Power, 15 January 1918 – 27 March 2010) was an Irish mathematical physicist. Her 1941 PhD from the University of Edinburgh, completed under the supervision of Max Born in just two years, is believed to make her the first Irish-born and -raised woman to receive a doctorate in the mathematical sciences.[1]
Life
Sheila Christina Power was the fourth of six children born in Galway city to Michael Power (aka Mícheál de Paor, originally from rural Kilkenny, Chair of Mathematics at University College Galway from 1912–1955) and Christina Cunniffe (who died in childbirth when Sheila was 12). She was educated by the Dominican nuns, both in Galway and in Dublin, and was awarded Honours in Mathematics in the Leaving Certificate Examination (the nation's secondary school exit exam), one of only 8 girls to do so in the whole country. After one year attending UCG, she switched to University College Dublin, from which she graduated with a BSc in 1938, with First Class Honours in Mathematics, and ranked at the top of her class. She did her Master's at UCD in 1939, and was subsequently awarded a National University of Ireland travelling studentship, which enabled her to undertake research at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. Two years later, in 1941, she earned her doctorate under the supervision of the celebrated physicist Max Born on the stability of crystal lattices.[2]
Returning to Dublin, she became an assistant lecturer at University College Dublin, and was also one of the first three scholars appointed to the brand new Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (DIAS), in October 1941. While at the DIAS she worked with Paul Dirac, Arthur Eddington and Erwin Schrödinger.[2] She developed a great interest in quantum physics, and wrote papers with Schrödinger, Hideki Yukawa, and Walter Heitler. From September 1948 to June 1949 she took a leave of absence from UCD and was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton where worked in an environment that included Freeman Dyson, Hermann Weyl, Harish-Chandra, and Albert Einstein.[3][1]
She developed the first mathematical courses on quantum mechanics at UCD and taught the subject to generations of students there, until her early retirement in 1979.
In 1952, she married Seán Tinney, a former engineering student she had lectured, and the couple's three children include classical pianist Hugh Tinney.[4]
Pioneer and role model for women in academia
By 1900 the campaign for the acceptance of women in academia was largely successful, and even Trinity College Dublin began admitting women in 1904. But the Royal Irish Academy (RIA) threw up legal obstacles and did not bow to the inevitable until 1949 when it finally admitted four women–one of them Sheila Tinney.[5][6] In 2016 the RIA honored Tinney by hanging her portrait along with 11 other female academic leaders on its walls.[7]
Even at University College Dublin, Tinney faced the entrenched prejudice against women. One professor emeritus recalls the sympathy she received when, early in her career, she was passed over for promotion in favour of a younger, and demonstrably less academically qualified, male colleague. During her time at UCD she gained a reputation for helping younger female colleagues who were trying to develop their careers.[2]
Award
The special medal cast for the 25 Global Winners of The Undergraduate Awards in 2016 (presented 10 November in Dublin) honoured Sheila Tinney, "trail-blazing and brilliant academic, who achieved astounding success through self-belief and determination."[8]
Papers
- ""On the Origin of the Soft Component of Cosmic Radiation" (with Walter Heitler), The Physical Review, Vol 72, No. 4, 15 August 1947, pp. 266–272
- "Note on the Influence of Damping on the Compton Scattering" Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section A: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Vol. 50 (1944/1945), pp. 139–142
- "The Intensity Distribution of Proper Vibrations" Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section A: Mathematical and Physical Sciences, vol. 49, 1943, pp. 91–100.
- "On the stability of crystal lattices VII. Long-wave and short-wave stability for the face-centred cubic lattice" Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Vol 38, Issue 1, January 1942, pp. 61–66
- "On the stability of crystal lattices VIII. Stability of rhombohedral Bravais lattices" (with H. W. Peng), Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Vol 38, Issue 1, January 1942, pp. 67–81
References
- 1 2 O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Sheila Christina Power Tinney", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.
- 1 2 3 The Irish Times Obituary: Sheila Tinney Pioneer in field of mathematical physics
- ↑ IAS Scholars: Sheila Christina Power
- ↑ Freeman Dyson and the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies Lochlainn O’Raifeartaigh blog, 23 May 2014, "The connection is that Hugh’s late mother, Professor Sheila Tinney, was an accomplished mathematician who spent time at Princeton IAS"
- ↑ Better without the ladies: the Royal Irish Academy and the admission of women members History of Ireland Magazine, Vol 19, Nov/Dec 2011
- ↑ How to draw more women into Stem The Irish Times, 28 July 2016
- ↑ Putting Ireland's groundbreaking Women on Walls at the RIA Royal Irish Academy, 7 December 2016
- ↑ The Undergraduate Awards 2016 Medal UA Blog, 13 October 2016