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'Edward Leamington Nichols' (
1854 –
November 10,
1937) was an
American physicist. He was born of American parentage at
Leamington,
England, and received his education at
Cornell University, graduating in
1875. After Studying at
Leipzig,
Berlin, and
Göttingen (Ph.D., 1879) he was appointed fellow in
physics at
Johns Hopkins. He then spent some time in the
Thomas Edison laboratory at
Menlo Park,
N. J., and subsequently became
professor of physics and
chemistry in the
Central University of Kentucky (
1881), professor of physics and
astronomy at the
University of Kansas (
1883), and professor of physics at
Cornell University (
1887). He was elected a member of the
National Academy of Sciences, was
president of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (
1907) and of the
American Physical Society (
1907-
08), and served as a member of the visiting committee of the
United States Bureau of Standards. The degrees of LL.D. and Sc.D. were conferred on Professor Nichols by the
University of Pennsylvania and
Dartmouth College respectively. He was the author of several college textbooks on physics.
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