Eddington, Sir Arthur
Stanley
Eddington, Sir Arthur
Stanley (1882-1944), British astronomer and physicist, who did important work
in relativity and astronomy. Eddington was born at
Kendal, England, and educated at Owens College (now Manchester University) and
Trinity College, University of Cambridge. He was chief assistant at the Royal
Observatory at Greenwich from 1906 to 1913, at which point he became professor
of astronomy at Cambridge. He was knighted in 1930. Eddington
helped clarify the theory of relativity, and made mathematical contributions to
the subject. His most important work, however, was on the evolution and
constitution of stars. His work in astronomy was laid out in his classic book The
Internal Constitution of the Stars, which was published in 1926. The
following year he wrote Stars and Atoms, a popular condensation of the
same material. Thereafter he was best known as a popularizer
of science, and his work The Nature of the Physical World (1928) was one
of the most widely read books on abstract science ever published. His later
works concentrated on philosophical and epistemological topics.
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Eddington, Sir Arthur Stanley
born Dec. 28, 1882, Kendal,
Westmorland, Eng.
died Nov. 22, 1944,
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
English
astronomer, physicist, and mathematician who did his greatest work in
astrophysics, investigating the motion, internal structure, and evolution of
stars. He also was the first expositor of the theory of relativity in the
English language.
Early
life.
Eddington was the son of the
headmaster of Stramongate School, an old Quaker
foundation in Kendal near Lake Windermere in the northwest of England. His
father, a gifted and highly educated man, died of typhoid in 1884. The widow
took her daughter and small son to Weston-super-Mare in Somerset, where young Eddington grew up and received his schooling. He entered
Owens College, Manchester, in October 1898, and Trinity College, Cambridge, in
October 1902. There he won every mathematical honour, as well as Senior
Wrangler (1904), Smith's prize, and a Trinity College fellowship (1907). In
1913 he received the Plumian Professorship of
Astronomy at Cambridge and in 1914 became also the director of its observatory.
From 1906 to 1913 Eddington was chief assistant at the Royal Observatory at
Greenwich, where he gained practical experience in the use of astronomical
instruments. He made observations on the island of Malta to establish its
longitude, led an eclipse expedition to Brazil, and investigated the
distribution and motions of the stars. He broke new ground with a paper on the
dynamics of a globular stellar system. In Stellar Movements and the Structure
of the Universe (1914) he summarized his mathematically elegant investigations,
putting forward the thesis that the spiral nebulae, cloudy structures seen in
the telescope, were galaxies like the Milky Way.
During World War I he
declared himself a pacifist. This arose out of his strongly held Quaker
beliefs. His religious faith also found expression in his popular writings on
the philosophy of science. In Science and the Unseen World (1929) he declared
that the world's meaning could not be discovered from science but must be
sought through apprehension of spiritual reality. He expressed this belief in
other philosophical books: The Nature of the Physical World (1928), New
Pathways of Science (1935), and The Philosophy of Physical Science (1939).
During these years he carried
on important studies in astrophysics and relativity, in addition to teaching
and lecturing. In 1919 he led an expedition to Príncipe
Island (WestAfrica) that provided the first
confirmation of Einstein's theory that gravity will bend the path of light when
it passes near a massive star. During the total eclipse of the sun, it was
found that the positions of stars seen just beyond the eclipsed solar disk
were, as the general theory of relativity had predicted, slightly displaced
away from the centre of the solar disk. Eddington was
the first expositor of relativity in the English language. HisReport
on the Relativity Theory of Gravitation (1918), written for the Physical
Society, followed by Space, Time and Gravitation (1920) and his great treatise
The Mathematical Theory of Relativity (1923)—the latter considered by Einstein
the finest presentation of the subject in any language—made Eddington
a leader in the field of relativity physics. His own contribution was chiefly a
brilliant modification of affine (non-Euclidean) geometry, leading to a geometry of the cosmos. Later, when the Belgian astronomer
Georges Lemaître produced the hypothesis of the
expanding universe, Eddington pursued the subject in
his own researches; these were placed before the general reader in his little
book The Expanding Universe (1933). Another book, Relativity Theory of Protons
and Electrons (1936), dealt with quantum theory. He gave many popular lectures
on relativity, leading the English physicist Sir Joseph John Thomson to remark
that Eddington had persuaded multitudes of people
that they understood what relativity meant.
Philosophy
of science.
His philosophical ideas
led him to believe that through a unification of quantum theory and general
relativity it would be possible to calculate the values of universal constants,notably the fine-structure constant, the ratio of
the mass of the proton to that of the electron, and the number of atoms in the
universe. This was an attempt, never completed, at a vast synthesis of the known
facts of the physical universe; it was published posthumously as Fundamental
Theory (1946), edited by Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker, a book that is
incomprehensible to most readers and perplexing in many places to all, but
which represents a continuing challenge to some.
Eddington received many honours,
including honorary degrees from 12 universities. He was president of the Royal
Astronomical Society (1921–23), the Physical Society (1930–32), the
Mathematical Association (1932), and the International Astronomical Union
(1938–44). He was knighted in 1930 and received the Order of Merit in 1938.
Meetings of the Royal Astronomical Society were often enlivened by dramatic
clashes between Eddington and Sir James Hopwood Jeans
or Edward Arthur Milne over the validity of scientific assumptions and
mathematical procedures. Eddington was an
enthusiastic participant in most forms of athletics, confining himself in later
years to cycling, swimming, and golf.
Eddington's greatest contributions
were in the field of astrophysics, where he did pioneer work on stellar
structure and radiation pressure, subatomic sources of stellar energy, stellar
diameters, the dynamics of pulsating stars, the relation between stellar mass
and luminosity, white dwarf stars, diffuse matter in interstellar space, and
so-called forbidden spectral lines. His work in astrophysics is represented by
the classic Internal Constitution of the Stars (1925) and in the public
lectures published as Stars and Atoms (1927). In his well-written popular books
he also set forth his scientificepistemology, which
he called “selective subjectivism” and “structuralism”—i.e., the interplay of
physical observations and geometry. He believed that a great part of physics
simply reflected the interpretation that the scientist imposes on his data. The
better part of his philosophy, however, was not his metaphysics but his
“structure” logic. His theoretical work in physics had a stimulating effect on
the thought and research of others, and many lines of scientific investigation
were opened as a result ofhis work.
Additional reading
A biography by Allie Vibert Douglas, The Life of Arthur Stanley Eddington (1956), contains a list of his books and
scientific papers. A popular discussion of Eddington's
work is James Roy Newman, Science and Sensibility, 2 vol. (1961). Herbert
Dingle, The Sources of Eddington's Philosophy (1954),
treats his philosophical ideas. C.W. Kilmister, Sir ArthurEddington (1966), discusses the full range of his
work. The brief work by S. Chandrasekhar, Eddington
(1983), is also useful.