Robert William Boyle

Robert William Boyle
Born October 2, 1883
Carbonear, Newfoundland
Died April 18, 1955 (1955-04-19) (aged 71)
London, England
Residence Canada, United Kingdom
Nationality Newfoundlander, Canadian, British
Fields Physics, Radioactivity, Ultrasonics
Institutions University of Manchester
University of Alberta
Board of Invention and Research
National Research Council of Canada
Alma mater McGill University
Doctoral advisor Ernest Rutherford
Known for ASDIC (Sonar)
Notable awards Royal Society of Canada
Flavelle Medal (1940)

Robert William Boyle (October 2, 1883 April 18, 1955) was a physicist and one of the most important early pioneers in the development of sonar.

Boyle was born in 1883 at Carbonear in the Dominion of Newfoundland. Boyle left Newfoundland for Montreal, Quebec in the Dominion of Canada where he trained at McGill University under Nobel Prize winner Sir Ernest Rutherford, in the then fledgling field of radioactivity. He earned McGill's first Doctor of Philosophy in physics in 1909. He then moved to England to continue his work by following Rutherford to the University of Manchester.

In 1912 he returned to Canada at the request of Henry Marshall Tory to become head of the physics department at the University of Alberta, and shifted his research to ultrasonics.

Pioneers in the development and application of piezoelectric transducers for the goal of submarine detection (a) Paul Langevin, (b) Robert William Boyle, (c) Cross-sectional view of a form of quartz transducer designed by Boyle in 1917, as recorded in the BIR (Board of Invention and Research) document 38164/17

During the First World War Boyle volunteered his expertise to the British Admiralty and, with the help of his old teacher Ernest Rutherford, he joined the Board of Inventions and Research and worked with British physicist Albert Beaumont Wood, a fellow student of Rutherford's.

Before 1917 the scientific teams from the Allied countries worked separately, however, after joining forces with French researchers, Boyle produced a working prototype of what the British called "ASDIC" (the first sonar).

Early versions of the technology were being installed on Royal Navy war ships just as the war came to an end.[1]

In 1919 Boyle returned to Alberta and shortly thereafter became dean of the Faculty of Applied Science, a position he held until 1929. That year he joined the National Research Council of Canada as the director of physics, where he supervised research into radar during the Second World War.

He continued to work at the National Research Council until his retirement in 1948, when he moved back to England.

He was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 1921 and awarded the Flavelle Medal in 1940. He died in London, England, aged 71.

References

  1. Michael A. Ainslie Principles of Sonar Performance Modelling, Springer, 2010 ISBN 3540876618, pages 10-12
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