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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hertha_AyrtonHertha Ayrton - Wikipedia

    Phoebe Sarah Hertha Ayrton (28 April 1854 – 26 August 1923) was a British engineer, mathematician, physicist and inventor, and suffragette. Known in adult life as Hertha Ayrton, born Phoebe Sarah Marks, she was awarded the Hughes Medal by the Royal Society for her work on electric arcs and ripple marks in sand and water.

  2. Sep 6, 2022 · Hertha Ayrton died aged 69 on 26 August 1923, from septicaemia caused by an infected insect bite. In her final years, she turned her considerable intellect to advancing the causes she cared most deeply about: women’s suffrage, the rights of working people, and protections for children.

  3. May 3, 2024 · Hertha Marks Ayrton was a British physicist who was the first woman nominated to become a fellow of the Royal Society. In 1861 Marks’s father died, and two years later she went to live with her aunt, author Marion Moss Hartog, who ran a school in London. When she was a teenager, Marks changed her.

  4. Her original field of study was mathematics, which she studied at Cambridge, and her first invention and patent was for a line-divider, a mathematical tool and engineering drawing instrument, which she developed while still a Cambridge undergraduate.

  5. Hertha Ayrton was an engineer and mathematician. She was awarded the Royal Society's Hughes Medal, and is well known as a suffragette. View four larger pictures. Biography. Hertha Marks Ayrton was given the name Phoebe Sarah Marks when she was born. Ayrton is her married name but less obvious is why she is always known as Hertha.

  6. Hertha Ayrton was a distinguished British scientist who was the first woman to receive the Hughes Medal of the Royal Society for a scientific work that was exclusively her own. She was committed to suffrage activism and ensuring proper recognition of women’s scientific work.

  7. Apr 28, 2020 · mathematician and inventor in a time when few women had access to opportunities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Ayrton was born Sarah Phoebe Marks in Portsmouth in 1854 to a relatively poor immigrant family of Polish origin.

  8. Hertha Ayrton, née Phoebe Sarah Marks, was born on April 28, 1854, in Portsea, England, the third of eight children of Levi and Alice Theresa (Moss) Marks. Levi Marks, an impecunious clockmaker and jeweler, had fled his native Poland as a young man to escape anti-Semitic persecution.

  9. Hertha Ayrton died on 26 August 1923, leaving behind 26 UK patents (13 in electrical engineering) and a rich legacy of scientific, technological, and political achievement. To learn more, check out this REACH primary source on Hertha Ayrton, which is part of the Electric Light Inquiry Unit.

  10. Feb 23, 2021 · The pioneering scientist Hertha Ayrton (1854–1923, born Phoebe Sarah Marks) made contributions to electric arc lighting, sediment transport and much more (see also Nature 511, 25–27; 2014 ).