Albert Potter Wills Explained

Albert Wills
Birth Date:1873
Nationality:American
Death Date:1937
Death Place:Florida, U.S.
Alma Mater:Clark University
Doctoral Advisor:Arthur Gordon Webster
Thesis Title:On the susceptibility of diamagnetic and weakly magnetic substances
Thesis Year:1897
Doctoral Students:Isidor Isaac Rabi
Francis Bitter
Ralph De Laer Kronig
Shirley Leon Quimby

Albert Potter Wills (1873–1937) was an American physicist who researched magnetic materials and was the PhD advisor of the Nobel Prize winner Isidor Isaac Rabi.

During his career he investigated magnetic susceptibilities, magnetic shielding, magnetostriction, conduction of electricity through mercury vapor, and hydrodynamics. He also wrote a textbook on vector analysis.

Wills received his PhD from Clark University in 1897 under Arthur Gordon Webster with a thesis entitled: On the susceptibility of diamagnetic and weakly magnetic substances.

During 1898–1899 Wills worked at the University of Göttingen and the University of Berlin. During 1899–1902 he was at Bryn Mawr College and 1902–1903 at the Cooper Hewitt Laboratory.[1] His final appointment, 1903–1937, was at Columbia University.

In 1909 at Columbia University, Max Planck gave eight lectures in German. Wills translated the lectures into English, and in 1915 Columbia University Press published his translation.[2]

References

  1. Book: Reich, Leonard S.. The Making of American Industrial Research: Science and Business at GE and Bell, 1876-1926. 22 August 2002. Cambridge University Press. 9780521522373. 19 October 2018. Google Books.
  2. Book: Planck, Max. Eight Lectures on Theoretical Physics, Delivered at Columbia in 1909 (translation of Acht Vorlesungen über theoretische Physik). 1909. Dover. 978-0-486-15156-4 .
    2012 reprint of 1st edition published in 1915 by Columbia University Press; translated by A. P. Willis; with a preface by Peter Pesic
    .

Sources