C. H. D. Buys Ballot
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C. H. D. Buys Ballot | |
---|---|
Born | October 10, 1817 |
Died | February 3, 1890 | (aged 72)
Nationality | Dutch |
Alma mater | Utrecht University |
Known for | Buys-Ballot's law |
Scientific career | |
Fields | chemistry meteorology |
Christophorus Henricus Diedericus Buys Ballot (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈbœys ˈbɑlɔt]; October 10, 1817 – February 3, 1890) was a Dutch chemist and meteorologist after whom Buys Ballot's law and the Buys Ballot table are named. He was first chairman of the International Meteorological Organization, the organization that would become the World Meteorological Organization.
Biography
Buys Ballot was the son of a Dutch Reformed minister, born in Kloetinge, Netherlands. He attended the Gymnasium at Zaltbommel and the Hogeschool (now University) of Utrecht. After receiving his doctorate in 1844, he became lecturer in mineralogy and geology at Utrecht; he added theoretical chemistry in 1846. In 1847 he was appointed professor of mathematics and from 1867 until his retirement he was professor of physics.
Buys Ballot tested the Doppler effect for sound waves in 1845 by using a group of musicians playing a calibrated note on a train in the Utrecht-Amsterdam line.
He died in the Dutch city of Utrecht.
Accomplishments
Buys Ballot is best known for his accomplishments in the field of meteorology, specifically the explanation of the direction of air flow in large weather systems. Furthermore, he founded the Royal Dutch Meteorological Institute in 1854 and he remained its chief director until his death.[1] He was one of the first to see the need for international cooperation, and in 1873 he organized and became the first chairman of the International Meteorological Organization, a precursor of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
Buys Ballot's law states that if a person in the Northern Hemisphere stands with his back to the wind, the atmospheric pressure is low to the left, high to the right. His main research effort in meteorology went into examining long-time series for regularities; he was more concerned with establishing the regularities than in explaining them. He made no contributions to the theory of meteorology which is perhaps surprising given his training in physics. The contrast with his American contemporary, William Ferrel, who discovered Buys-Ballot's law slightly earlier, is striking.
Buys Ballot devised a tabular method for investigating periodicity in time series. In 1847 he used the table now named after him to determine the period of the sun's rotation from daily observations of temperature in the Netherlands from 1729 to 1846.
Buys Ballot became member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1855.[2]
Among his students was the prominent Dutch astronomer Jacobus Kapteyn.
Eponym
In 1971 the lunar crater Buys-Ballot was named in his honor.
Bibliography
- Harold L. Burstyn "Buys Ballot, Christoph Hendrik Diederik" Dictionary of Scientific Biography volume 1, p. 628, New York: Scribners 1973.
- E. van Everdingen C. H. D. Buys Ballot 1817-1890 The Hague 1953.
- O. B. Sheynin On the History of the Statistical Method in Meteorology, Archive for the History of the Exact Sciences, 31, (1984-5) 53-95.
- J. L. Klein Statistical Visions in Time, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1997.
- Houdas, Y. (April 1991). "[Doppler, Buys-Ballot, Fizeau. Historical note on the discovery of the Doppler's effect]". Annales de cardiologie et d'angéiologie (in French). 40 (4): 209–13. PMID 2053764.
- Jonkman, E. J. (1980). "Doppler research in the nineteenth century". Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. 6 (1): 1–5. doi:10.1016/0301-5629(80)90056-3. PMID 6989075.
References
- ^ Beek, Leo (2004). De geschiedenis van de Nederlandse natuurwetenschap (in Dutch). Kampen: Kok. p. 237. ISBN 978-90-435-0788-2.
- ^ "Christophorus Henricus Didericus Buys Ballot (1817 - 1890)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
External links
- Dutch chemists
- Dutch meteorologists
- Dutch physicists
- 1817 births
- 1890 deaths
- Members of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Corresponding Members of the St Petersburg Academy of Sciences
- Utrecht University alumni
- Utrecht University faculty
- People from Goes
- People from Utrecht (city)
- 19th-century chemists
- 19th-century physicists
- 19th-century Dutch scientists