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T. H. Laby

Australian physicist and chemist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Thomas Howell Laby FRS (3 May 1880 – 21 June 1946), was an Australian physicist and chemist, Professor of Natural Philosophy, University of Melbourne 1915–1942. Along with George Kaye, he was one of the founding editors of the reference book Tables of Physical and Chemical Constants and Some Mathematical Functions, usually known simply as "Kaye and Laby".

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Early life and education

Thomas Howell Laby was born on 3 May 1880 in Creswick, Victoria, Australia.[citation needed] He moved with his family to New South Wales around 1883. Laby's father, Thomas James Laby, a flour-miller, died in 1888.[citation needed]

After some schooling at country schools and private study, Laby joined the Taxation Department in 1898 but soon gained a position in the chemical laboratory of the NSW Department of Agriculture.[citation needed]

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Career

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Laby obtained a position of acting demonstrator in chemistry at the University of Sydney, based on a recommendation by his boss F.B. Guthrie at the Department of Agriculture laboratory.[1] Laby took evening classes at the university and in 1903 had a paper published by the Royal Society of New South Wales, "The separation of iron from nickel and cobalt".[citation needed]

Laby worked with Douglas Mawson, who was then a junior demonstrator. The two men published a paper which was the first to identify radium-bearing ore in Australia. Professor Edgeworth David made the formal presentation of the paper to the Royal Society of NSW on 5 October 1904 on the men's behalf.[2][3][4][1]

In 1905 Laby went to England to study under Sir J. J. Thomson at the Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge. There he received a Bachelor of Arts degree by theses on the ionization produced by alpha-particles and on the supersaturation and nuclear condensation of organic vapours. He also met Ernest Rutherford there, who became a friend.[citation needed]

Laby was appointed to the new chair of physics at Victoria University College in Wellington, New Zealand in 1909 and completed work with George Kaye resulting in publication of Tables of physical and chemical constants with some mathematical functions (London, 1911); the title has had sixteen editions as of 2007.[5][6]

Laby was president of section A of the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science in Melbourne, 1912.[citation needed]

Laby had married in 1914 and the next year was appointed to the chair of natural philosophy at the University of Melbourne. He developed valves for an anti-gas respirator, performed radiographic testing of fuses and inspected X-ray equipment for military hospitals.[citation needed]

Laby was awarded a Doctor of Science by the University of Cambridge in 1921 and carried on his research, mainly into heat and X-ray spectroscopy. He was Commonwealth adviser in Radium at the Commonwealth Radium Laboratory when it was established in 1929 on university grounds. In 1927 he joined the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research's Australian Radio Research Board.[citation needed]

In 1924 Laby was president of the Royal Society of Victoria, in 1931 he became a Fellow of the Royal Society,[7] in 1939 was inaugural president of the Australian Institute of Physics and chairman of the Optical Munitions Panel 1940–44.[citation needed]

In May 1928, he and his team of collaborators from the University of Melbourne conducted street noise measurements from trams in Melbourne, with electronic instruments they manufactured, being the first time in the world that the sound level was recorded with no signal filtering (they did not use an audiometer).[8][9] The first of several street measurements was made on 9 May 1928, at the corner of St Paul's Cathedral where their apparatus was set up at the top of the cathedral steps, and 3LO radio station transmitted the noise captured by the microphone.[10][11]

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Later life and death

Laby had suffered from low blood pressure and asthma, he died on 21 June 1946 of arteriosclerosis. He was survived by his wife and two daughters.[citation needed]

Legacy

In 1976 he was honoured on a postage stamp bearing his portrait issued by Australia Post.[12]

References

Further reading

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