Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford (in German: Reichsgraf von Rumford) (26 March 1753 - 21 August 1814) was an Anglo-American physicist and inventor whose challenges to established physical theory were part of the 19th century revolution in thermodynamics.
Thompson's prospects were dim in 1772 but in that year they changed abruptly. He met, charmed and married a rich and well-connected heiress named Sarah Rolfe, moved to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and through his wife's influence with the governor, was appointed a major in a New Hampshire Militia.
When the American Revolution began, Thompson was a man of property and standing in New England, who had important connections to the British government. He threw in his lot with the British, and was active in recruiting loyalists to fight the patriots. This naturally earned him the enmity of the popular party, and a mob attacked Thompson's house. He fled to the British lines, abandoning his wife, as it turned out, forever. Thompson was welcomed by the British, to whom he gave valuable information about the American forces, and became an advisor to both General Gage and Lord Germain.
While working with the British armies in America, he conducted experiments concerning the force of gunpowder, the results of which were widely acclaimed when eventually published, in 1781, in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Thus, when he moved to London at the conclusion of the war, he already had a reputation as a scientist.
His experiments on gunnery and explosives led to an interest in heat. He devised a method for measuring the specific heats of solids but was disappointed that Johannes Wilcke had priority.
Thompson next investigated the insulating properties of various materials including fur, wool and feathers. He correctly appreciated that the insulating properties of these natural materials arise from the fact that they inhibit the convection of air. He then made the somewhat reckless, and incorrect, inference that air and, in fact, all gases, were perfect non-conductors of heatRumford (1786) "New experiments upon heat" Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society p.273Rumford (1792) "Experiments upon heat" Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society p.48. He further saw this as evidence of the argument from design, contending that divine providence had arranged for fur on animals in such a way as to guarantee their comfort.
In 1797, he extended his claim about non-conductivity to liquidsRumford (1797) "On the propagation of heat in fluids" Nicholson's Journal 1 pp298-341. The idea raised considerable objections from the scientific establishment, John DaltonCardwell (1971) p.99 and John Leslie making particularly forthright attacks. Instrumentation far exceeding anything available in terms of accuracy and precision would have been needed to veryify Thompson's claim. Again, he seems to have been influenced by his theological beliefsRumford (1804) "An enquiry concerning the nature of heat and the mode of its communication" Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society p.77 and it is likely that he wished to grant water a privileged and providential status in the regulation of human lifeCardwell (1971) p.102.
However, his most important scientific work took place in Munich, and centered on the nature of heat, which he contended in An Experimental Enquiry Concerning the Source of the Heat which is Excited by Friction (1798) was not the caloric of then-current scientific thinking but a form of motion. Though this work met with a hostile reception, it was subsequently important in establishing the laws of conservation of energy later in the 19th century.
In 1804, he married Marie-Anne Lavoisier, the widow of the great French chemist Antoine Lavoisier, his American wife having died since his emigration. They soon separated, but Thompson settled in Paris and continued his scientific work until his death on August 21, 1814.
1753 births | 1814 deaths | History of Bavaria | British scientists | Fellows of the Royal Society | German nobility | American scientists | British loyalists in the American Revolution | Benjamin Thompson | Benjamin Thompson | Benjamin Thompson | Benjamin Thompson | Benjamin Thompson
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