sir william crookes by: javontae spencer clifton elam

13
SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

Upload: marjorie-anderson

Post on 12-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

SIR WILLIAM CROOKES

BY: Javontae Spencer

Clifton Elam

Page 2: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

ORIGIN OF CROOKES

Crookes was born in London on

June 17, 1832.

Sir. William was the oldest of his six-

teen bro-thers and sisters, and the

son of a wealthy tailor and real estate

investor.

He lived from 1832 to 1919.

Page 3: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

ACKNOWLEDGE

Sir William is known for his discovery of the

element Thallium and his studies in the Cathode-ray,

otherwise known as the “Crookes-Ray.”

His researches on electrical discharges through a

rarefied gas led him to observe the dark space

around the cathode, which is now called the Crookes

dark space.

Page 4: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

EXPERIMENT

Particle Beams: a stream of charges or neutral

particles, in many cases moving at a speed of light.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XU8nMKkzbT8

Page 5: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

CATHODE RAY

A vacuum tube in which a hot cathode emits electrons that are accelerated as a beam through a

relatively high voltage anode, further focused or deflected electrostatically or electromagnetically, and

allowed to fall on a phosphorescent screen.

A Cathode ray consists of three basic parts: the electron gun assembly, the phosphor viewing surface,

and the glass envelope. The electron gun assembly consists of a heated metal cathode surrounded by

a metal anode. The cathode is given a negative electrical voltage and the anode is given a positive

voltage. Electrons from the cathode flow through a small hole in the anode to produce a beam of

electrons. The electron gun also contains of electrical coils or plates which accelerate, focus,

and deflect the electron beam to strike the phosphor viewing surface in a rapid side-to-side scanning

motion starting at the top of the surface and working down. The phosphor viewing surface is a thin

layer of material which emits visible light when struck by the electron beam.

The chemical composition of the phosphor can be altered to produce the colors

white, blue, yellow, green, or red.

Page 6: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

Although the Cathode ray was previously discovered by

Ferdinand Braun of Strasbourg, Crookes accidentally

discovered the details involved in the Cathode ray. After his

works with the Cathode, it soon led to the invention of the

television somewhere in the 1920’s. A conventional

television is nothing more than a cathode-ray tube.

Cathode rays were a stream of charged particles which

carry a negative charge.

Page 7: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

THALLIUM

The density of Thallium is 11,850 kg/m3 or 11.85 g/cm3.

Thallium can also be deadly under certain circumstances. Along side Arsenic, it is one of the

most commonly used poisons.

Thallium is in the metal classification, group thirteen, period six.

It is also a solid while stored at room temperature.

Thallium is used for insect and rat poison, special glass for the highly reflective lenses, and it is

used in some medicines.

The two main oxidation states of thallium are +1 and +3. In the oxidation state most +1

compounds closely resemble the potassium or the silver compounds 

. For example, the water-soluble and very basic Thallium(I) hydroxide reacts with Carbon

dioxide forming water-soluble Thallium Carbonate. This carbonate is the only water soluble

heavy metal carbonate. The similarity with silver compounds is observed with the Halide, Oxide,

and Sulfide compounds.

Page 8: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam
Page 9: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

THE EARLY YEARS

At the age of 16, Crookes entered the Royal College of Chemistry in hopes of studying

organic chemistry.

While there he became the assistant to August Wilhelm Von Hofmann. While attending a

meeting Crookes met an eminent physicist named, Michael Faraday, who convinced him to

change his area of concentration from chemistry to physics, and particularly to optics.

After his father's death, he received a substantial inheritance and was able to open his own

laboratory and concentrate on physics. It was not long before this investment paid off.

While experimenting with spectroscopy, physics pertaining to the theory and interpretation

of interactions between matter and radiation, Crookes discovered a lime green band in the

spectrum of selenium, a band that belongs to no known element at that time. After several

years he succeeded in isolating the element, which he named thallium ( derived from the

Greek word thallos, meaning "green twig ").

In 1861 he published his discovery. While trying to determine the precise atomic weight of

thallium, Crookes became interested in the use of vacuum tubes, which had recently been

improved upon by Johann Heinrich Geissler.

Page 10: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

Crookes' was a meteorologist most of his life. In

1856 he married Ellen Humphrey and together they

had three sons and daughters.

Page 11: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

THE LATER YEARS

Crookes invented a device called a radiometer, consisting of a series of four small vanes balanced

upon a pin. he two sides of each vane were painted different colors--one side black, the other

silver. The entire assembly was then sealed in a vacuum bulb, when light struck the vanes the

black sides would heat up, causing them to turn as the excited air molecules struck them. This

device was (and still is) mostly a science toy, but it was also used by Scottish physicist James

Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879) to prove the kinetic theory of gases.

In the late 1870s the first practical cathode-ray tube was designed. It was comprised of a vacuum

tube with two electrodes, a cathode and an anode, one at each end of the tube. When an electric

current was introduced and the tube evacuated, a green glow would appear.

Crookes' discovered the electron. Since the Cathode Ray had previously been built, he needed to

call it something else. Today it is known as the Crookes' Tube. From the tube he pulled out some

objects have a negative charge when hitting the tube. It caused the objects to spin which

suggested they had mass. J.J. Thomson confirmed Crookes' discovery later on.

Page 12: SIR WILLIAM CROOKES BY: Javontae Spencer Clifton Elam

For some, however, his reputation is tarnished by

the fact that he was a spiritualist, publishing several

papers on the validity of psychic phenomena and the

occult