Awards & Winners

Francis Farley

Francis James Macdonald Farley FRS is a British scientist. Fellow of the Institute of Physics and an honorary fellow of Trinity College Dublin During WWII he designed and made the first X-band microwave radar with 100 ns pulse and a very narrow beam which controlled the 15" guns at Dover. It showed shells splashing around the target. He invented clutter reference Doppler radar which could see vehicles on land and was used in Italy. As a senior lecturer in Auckland University he was a NZ delegate to the 1955 UN conference in Geneva on "Atomic energy for peaceful purposes". During a year at Harwell in1955 he measured the neutron yield from plutonium fission as a function of the incident neutron epithermal energy. From 1957 at CERN he measured the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon in three successive experiments, inventing the muon storage ring. Accurate tests of special relativity at CERN. He participated in the follow up measurement at Brookhaven National Laboratory. He has worked on wave energy since 1976 and has filed 14 patents in this area. He is the co-inventor of the Anaconda wave energy device. He won the 1980 Hughes Medal of the Royal Society "for his ultra-precise measurements of the muon magnetic moment, a severe test of quantum electrodynamics and of the nature of the muon".

Awards by Francis Farley

Check all the awards nominated and won by Francis Farley.

1980


Hughes Medal
(For his ultra-precise measurements of the muon magnetic moment, a severe test of quantum electrodynamics and of the nature of the muon.)