Francis Eugene Nipher | |
Birth Date: | 10 December 1847 |
Birth Place: | Port Byron, New York |
Death Place: | Kirkwood, Missouri |
Occupation: | Physicist |
Education: | Iowa State University |
Signature: | Signature of Francis Eugene Nipher (1847–1926).png |
Francis Eugene Nipher (December 10, 1847 – October 6, 1926) was a United States physicist.
Francis Eugene Nipher was born in Port Byron, New York on December 10, 1847.[1]
He graduated in 1870 from Iowa State University, where he became assistant in physical science. In 1874, he was appointed professor of physics at Washington University in St. Louis. He organized the second state weather service, that of Missouri, in 1877, and for ten years it was maintained without official support. From 1878 until 1883, he conducted a magnetic survey of Missouri, doing the work under private auspices, and publishing the annual reports in the Transactions of the St. Louis Academy of Sciences. Nipher was a member of scientific societies, and in 1885 became president of the St. Louis Academy of Sciences.[1] He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1907.[2]
He died at his home in Kirkwood, Missouri on October 6, 1926.[3] [4]
His publications, including twenty-five papers on physics, were contributed to the American Journal of Science and to transactions of societies. He is also the author of Theory of Magnetic Measurements (New York, 1886).
No. 11, marzo 1918, Electrical Experimenter Science and Invention, pag. 743, can electricity destroy gravitation?, Francis E. Nipher.