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Encyclopedia > Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton

Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton (October 6, 1903June 25, 1995) was an Irish physicist, the winner of the 1951 Nobel Prize for Physics along with Sir John Douglas Cockcroft.


Walton was born in Dungarvan, County Waterford. He attended day schools in Cookstown and Tyrone before becoming a boarder at Methodist College Belfast in 1915 where he excelled at mathematics. He became a fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, in 1934, and was appointed Erasmus Smith's Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy in 1946. In 1960 he was elected Senior Fellow.


He and John Cockcroft were awarded the 1951 Nobel Prize for work on the transmutation of atomic nuclei by artificially accelerated atomic particles carried out in the Cavendish Laboratory in the University of Cambridge.


External links

  • Ernest T. S. Walton – Biography (http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1951/walton-bio.html).
  • Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton (http://www.nobel-winners.com/Physics/ernest_thomas_sinton_walton.html).

  Results from FactBites:
 
Ernest Walton (930 words)
Walton was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1951, jointly with J.D. Cockroft, for ‘splitting the atom’.
Ernest Walton was born in Dungarvan, Co. Waterford, in 1903, son of Methodist Minister John Walton and Anne E. Sinton.
Walton was appointed Erasmus Smith Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy at TCD in 1946 and was Head of the Physics Department until his retirement in 1974.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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