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Abbe, Cleveland (1838-1916): M.A. New York 1860. Meteorologist. 1f

Bache, Alexander Dallas (1806-1867): was the great-grandson of Benjamin Franklin, a physicist becoming superintendent of the United States Coast Survey in 1843 until his death. Sent 33 tidal letters, chiefly to Gordon, Pourtales and Whewell; he received 44 letters, chiefly from Pourtales, Gordon and Meech. http://www.lib.noaa.gov/edocs/BACHE1.htm#BACHE 

Benham, Henry Washington (1813-1884): was captain of engineers, assistant in charge of the United States Coast Survey Office at Washington, becoming lieutenant-colonel. He received 12 tidal letters mostly from Pourtales.

            Bolles, C.P. 1t

Bowditch, Nathaniel, of Otis Place, Boston MA. Eldest of four children of the nautical textbook writer of the same name. Together, they wrote 1 tidal letter.

            Cassidy A 2f

            Clark JC 1f

            Collins J 1f

            Cooper WW 4f

            Cordel E 1f

            Cox 1t

Davis, Charles Henry (1807-1877): a naval officer in charge of the coast survey from Rhode Island north and published "A Memoir upon the Geological Action of the Tidal and Other Currents of the Ocean" (Memoirs American Academy, vol.IV, n.s. 1849). and "The Law of the Deposit of the Flood Tide" (Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, vol.III, 1852), supervised publication of the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac. 1f 1t

            Dean GW 1f

            Edison AD 1f

Everett, Edward (1794-1865): M.A. Harvard 1814, politician. 1f 1t

            Fairfield, George A.: assistant United States Coast Survey. 2f

Ferrel, William (1817-1891): meteorologist, entered the Coast and Geodetic Survey in 1867 and devised a tide-predicting machine, published "Tidal Researches" (United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Report, 1874, Appendix). 

Ferrel conjectured that tides should retard the Earth’s rotation, an effect dismissed by Laplace . Ferrel found that Laplace had neglected 2nd order terms which gave the retarding.

After Laplace, Ferrel was chief founder of the subject now known as geophysical fluid dynamics. He gave the first general formulation of the equations of motion for a body moving with respect to the rotating earth and drew from them the consequences for atmospheric and oceanic circulation. He worked with the American Nautical Almanac from 1858 to 1867 when he then joined the U.S. Coast Survey. His first paper was published in B. A. Gould Astronomical Journal 1853. Since Laplace had claimed to account for all the observed acceleration in the moon’s orbit without tidal friction, Ferrel suggested that the latter might be counteracted by the earth’s shrinking as it cooled. When about 1860 it became clear that Laplace ’s theory could not account for the observed value of the moon’s acceleration, Ferrel returned to the problem in a paper read to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1864. Although others reached the same general conclusion independently, Ferrel’s was the first quantitative treatment of tidal friction, a problem that continues to be of scientific interest.

After three more papers published locally, Ferrel returned to tidal theory in 1856 with his second paper in Gould’s Astronomical Journal. In it he suggested that Laplace was in error when he claimed that the diurnal tide would vanish in an ocean of uniform depth. Ferrel’s criticisms were parallel to Airy’s, and both were strongly opposed by Kelvin. The problem of “oscillations of the second kind” to which they relate remains of current scientific interest.

In both these early papers Ferrel established the basis of his contributions to the theory of tides. Laplace had ignored fluid friction, which was not successfully treated mathematically until Navier and Poisson in the 1820’s and Saint-Venant and Stokes in the 1840’s inaugurated the modern theory. In tidal studies Airy (1845) assumed friction to be proportional to the first power of the velocity, in which case (as in Laplace ’s) the equations are linear. Thomas Young (1823), although he assumed friction to be proportional to the square of the velocity, failed to introduce the rquired equation of continuity. Ferrel’s major contribution to tidal theory was thus to begin the full nonlinear treatment necessitated by realistic assumptions concerning friction.

After joining the Coast Survey, Ferrel made important contributions to the techniques of tidal prediction. He extended the nonharmonic developments of the tide-producing potential beyond the points reached by Laplace and Lubbock, and he gave the first reasonably complete harmonic development. Here his endeavours were parallel to those of Kelvin, who was responsible for the first tide-predicting machine (probably the earliest piece of large-scale computing machinery). In 1880 Ferrel, too, designed a tide predictor, which went into service in 1883. Although it was an analogue machine like Kelvin’s, Ferrel’s gave maxima and minima rather than a continuous curve as its output. Ferrel also made considerable progress in dealing with the shallow-water tidal components and in using tidal data to calculate the mass of the moon

[Ferrel’s major work on tides is his Tidal Researches, appended to the Coast Survey Report for 1874 Washington 1874; and he described his tide predictor in app.10 to the Coast Survey Report for 1883 Washington 1884. Ferrel’s bibliography, in Biographical Memoirs National Academy of Sciences, 3 1895 300-309 lists more than 100 items; it is preceded 287-299 by an edited autobiography - the MS of which is in Harvard College Library. Cleveland Abbe’s memoir in (as above) 267-286 is the fullest; more concise is W.M. Davis Proceedings of the Academy of Arts and Sciences 28 1893 388-393. 1f

            Foreman: Smithsonian professor. 1t

            Foster JG 3f

            Gairdner, Meredith 1f

            Gibble JE 1f

            Gibbs, Lewis R.: professor of mathematics, Charleston. 1f

Gordon WW: Sent 20 tidal letters, chiefly to Bache; he received 29 letters, chiefly from Mitchell, Bache, Ober and Pourtales. Biographical information on this scientists would be very welcome.

Graham, James Duncan (1799-1865): lieutenant-colonel surveyor and topographer, during 1858-9 he discovered the existence of a lunar tide on the Great Lakes. 1f

            Heaton H 5t

            Hein J 1f

 

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