Aimé Cotton

Aimé Cotton

Aimé Auguste Cotton (9 October 1869 - 16 April 1951) was a French physicist known for his studies of the interaction of light with chiral molecules. In the absorption bands of these molecules, he discovered large values of optical rotatory dispersion (ORD), or variation of optical rotation as a function of wavelength (Cotton effect), as well as circular dichroism or differences of absorption between left and right circularly polarized light.

Biography

Aimé Cotton was born in Bourg-en-Bresse, France on 9 October 1869. His grandfather was director of the École normale (teachers' college) of Bourg, and his father, Eugène Cotton, was a mathematics professor at the college of Bourg, the institution where physicist André-Marie Ampère began his career. His brother Émile Cotton was a mathematician and academician.

Aimé Cotton attended a lycée (high school) in Bourg and then the special mathematics program at the Lycée Blaise Pascal in Clermont-Ferrand. He entered the École normale supérieure in 1889, and won the physical sciences prize on graduating in 1893.

As a graduate student at the physics laboratory of the École normale supérieure, he then prepared his doctoral thesis in physical sciences. In this thesis he studied the interactions of polarized light with optically active substances containing chiral molecules. In absorption bands of these substances, he found large variations of optical rotation as a function of wavelength, now known as optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) or as the Cotton effect.He also discovered the related phenomenon of circular dichroism, or unequal absorption of left and right circularly polarized light. [Willard H.H., Merritt L.L., Dean J.A. and Settle F.A. "Instrumental Methods of Analysis" (van Nostrand, 6th edn 1981) p.415] [Cotton A., Compt. Rend. 120, 989, 1044(1895); Ann. Chim. Phys. 8, 347(1896)] These two phenomena were later used to determine the stereochemistries of chiral molecules in organic chemistry and in biochemistry.

He was appointed maître de conférences in the science faculty at Toulouse in 1895, and defended his doctoral thesis in 1896 before the science faculty of the University of Paris. His thesis was entitled "Research on the absorption and dispersion of light by substances capable of optical rotation". In 1900, he was appointed assistant professor as a temporary replacement for Jules Violle. In 1904 he was appointed instructor, and in 1910 assistant professor at the science faculty of the University of Paris, assigned to the École normale supérieure, where he remained until 1922.

During this period his research dealt with the interactions of light and magnetism. He worked first with Pierre Weiss on the Zeeman effect, the splitting of spectral lines in the presence of a magnetic field. For this work he invented the Cotton balance to measure the magnetic field intensity precisely. With Weiss he studied the magnetic splitting of the blue lines of the zinc atom and in 1907 they were able to determine the ratio of the electron's charge to its mass (e/m) with better precision than the method of J.J. Thomson.

Cotton then became interested in the Faraday effect near absorption lines and demonstrated magnetic circular dichroism. At the same time, he worked with his former classmate Henri Mouton, a biologist at the Pasteur Institute, on magnetic birefringence in colloïdal solutions of magnetic particles. In 1907 the two discovered the Cotton-Mouton effect, an intense magnetic birefringence with optical axis parallel to the magnetic field lines.

In 1913 he married Eugénie Feytis, also a physicist. They had three children. During World War I he and Pierre Weiss developed the Cotton-Weiss system for locating enemy artillery.

He supervised the thesis work of Georges Bruhat on circular dichroïsm and optical rotatory dispersion (1914). In 1917 he helped to found the Institut d'optique théorique et appliquée, now the École supérieure d'optique. In 1914, he proposed construction of a large electromagnet capable of producing intense magnetic fields. Work on the magnet finally started in 1924 in the Service des recherches et inventions at Bellevue, later the Laboratoire du magnétisme at Meudon-Bellevue, and finally the Laboratoire Aimé Cotton in his honour. Magnetic fields as high as to 7 Tesla were attained.

In 1919, he became chairman of the physics committee of the Direction des Inventions intéressant la défense nationale (Directorate of Inventions relevant to National Defense). In 1920 he was named professor of the new chair of theoretical physics and astrophysics at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Paris. In 1922 he succeeded Gabriel Lippmann in the chair of general physics, and at the same time became director of physics research in the faculty. In 1923 he was elected to the French Academy of Sciences, and in 1938 he was elected its president. He retired in 1941 and was replaced by Jean Cabannes as professor and laboratory directory, although he retained the direction of the magneto-optics laboratory at Bellevue. Also in 1941 he was imprisoned by the German occupiers at Fresnes for one and a half months, and was later awarded the Rosette de la résistance. He died on April 16, 1951.

References

External links

[http://lyoinfo.in2p3.fr/delphi/laktineh/monitorat/public_html/ Bibliography (in French) of some 20th century physicists. From the Centre d'initiation à l'Enseignement Supérieur (CIES) of Lyon]


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  • Aime Cotton — Aimé Cotton Aimé Cotton Naissance 9 octobre 1869 Bourg en Bresse (France) Décès 16 avril 1951 Sèvres (France) Institution Faculté des sciences de l université de Toulouse, École normale supérieure, Faculté des sciences …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Aimé Cotton — Naissance 9 octobre 1869 Bourg en Bresse (France) Décès 16 avril 1951 Sèvres (France) Institution Faculté des sciences de l université de Toulouse, École normale supérieure, Faculté des sciences de l université de Paris… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Aimé Cotton — Aimé Auguste Cotton (* 9. Oktober 1869 in Bourg en Bresse; † 16. April 1951 in Sèvres) war ein französischer Physiker, der für die Erforschung der Interaktion von Licht mit chiralen Molekülen bekannt ist. In den Absorptionsbändern dieser Moleküle …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Laboratoire Aime Cotton — Laboratoire Aimé Cotton Le laboratoire Aimé Cotton (ou LAC) est un laboratoire de recherche constituant une unité propre du CNRS, associée à l université Paris Sud 11. Il fut créé en 1927 comme annexe du Laboratoire des recherches physiques de la …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Laboratoire Aimé Cotton — Le laboratoire Aimé Cotton (ou LAC) est un laboratoire de recherche constituant une unité propre du CNRS, associée à l université Paris Sud 11. Il fut créé en 1927 comme annexe du Laboratoire des recherches physiques de la faculté des sciences de …   Wikipédia en Français

  • COTTON (A. A.) — COTTON AIMÉ AUGUSTE (1869 1951) Né à Bourg en Bresse, élève à l’École normale supérieure de 1890 à 1893, Aimé Auguste Cotton y enseigna de 1900 à 1922, après avoir été professeur à la faculté des sciences de Toulouse de 1895 à 1900. De 1920 à… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Cotton (disambiguation) — Cotton is a soft, staple fiber that can be spun and woven into a textile of the same name. Cotton may also refer to: Gossypium, the cotton plant Cotton (series), a series of video games Cotton (motorcycle), British motorcycle manufacturer Cotton… …   Wikipedia

  • Cotton — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Aimé Cotton (1869–1951), französischer Physiker Annie Cotton (* 1975), kanadische Sängerin und Schauspielerin Antony Cotton (* 1975), britischer Schauspieler Aylett R. Cotton (1826–1912), US amerikanischer …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • Cotton-Effekt — Der Cotton Effekt ist ein Phänomen der optischen Aktivität. Er ist die charakteristische Änderung der optischen rotatorischen Dispersion bzw. des Circulardichroismus in der Nähe einer Absorptionsbande eines Stoffes. In einer Wellenlängenregion,… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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