Henry Augustus Rowland

American physicist
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Quick Facts
Born:
Nov. 27, 1848, Honesdale, Pa., U.S.
Died:
April 16, 1901, Baltimore, Md.
Inventions:
concave diffraction grating

Henry Augustus Rowland (born Nov. 27, 1848, Honesdale, Pa., U.S.—died April 16, 1901, Baltimore, Md.) was an American physicist who invented the concave diffraction grating, which replaced prisms and plane gratings in many applications, and revolutionized spectrum analysis—the resolution of a beam of light into components that differ in wavelength.

In 1872 Rowland became an instructor of physics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N.Y., and four years later he was elected to the chair of physics in the newly founded Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. In 1876 he succeeded in proving that a moving electric charge has the same magnetic action as an electric current. Three years later, with improved thermometric and calorimetric methods, he redetermined the mechanical equivalent of heat; he also redetermined the standard value of electrical resistance, the ohm.

In 1885 Rowland finished constructing a machine capable of engraving as many as 20,000 lines to the inch for diffraction gratings. He then ruled gratings on spherical concave surfaces, thus eliminating the need for additional lenses and mirrors in spectrometers, and used them to develop exact spectrometry. His Photographic Map of the Normal Solar Spectrum (1888) was a spectrogram more than 35 feet (11 m) long, and his table of solar spectrum wavelengths (Astrophysical Journal, vol. 1–6, 1895–97) contained tens of thousands of solar lines and was a standard reference for many years. He was the first president of the American Physical Society (1899–1901), and he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Society of London in 1899.

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