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Professor Wordsworth Price is a
multi-talented individual who dedicated his life to
physics and electrical engineering, doing extensive
work on dielectrics[1].
He was given honourable mention in Who's Who of British
Scientists (1980 - 1981) and the International Book of
Honour (1984).
Wordsworth “Wordy” Price was born on
10th August, 1930, in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad. After
attending Tranquillity Boys’ Intermediate School, he
won a Government Exhibition scholarship to Queen’s
Royal College (QRC). There, Price passed the Higher
School Certificate three times in different mixes of
the science subjects. Immediately after leaving QRC in
1949, he worked at the Colonial Microbiological
Research Institute in Port-of-Spain as a laboratory
assistant.
He then won a scholarship to United
British Oilfields of Trinidad (UBOT), where he was one
of two locals selected for entry to the senior staff.
While at UBOT, the news came that he had won a
scholarship to the University College of the West
Indies (UCWI), Jamaica and Price left Trinidad in 1950.
At university, Price completed a
Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Physics, Chemistry and
Pure Mathematics in 1954. He began his Masters in
Experimental Physics in Jamaica, researching the
dielectric properties of sapphire, but left in 1957 to
continue the degree in England. Later that year, Price
took up the post of Experimental Officer at the British
Electrical and Allied Industries Research Association
(ERA) where he did work on the intrinsic electric
strength of polythene[2].
In 1959, Price left the ERA to work as a scientific
officer at British Dielectric Research Ltd where he
conducted research for the Atomic Weapons Research
Establishment, developed micro-miniature capacitors[3]
for the Royal Radar Establishment, and sintered[4]
tantalum[5] capacitors for
commercial use. Price went on to gain a Doctor of
Philosophy (PhD) in Theoretical Physics from the
University of London in 1971, conducting research on
the electric potential[6]
theory. He also discovered a mathematical theorem in
infinite products[7],
which was published in the Proceedings of the Cambridge
Philosophical Society (1974).
In 1963, Price left British
Dielectric Research Ltd to lecture in physics at
Norwood Technical College. He subsequently became a
senior lecturer in physics and electrical engineering
at what is now South Bank University. After his
retirement in 1995, he taught Statistics for Business
and Economics at Schiller International University and
attained the title of Professor.
Professor Price has achieved
excellence in extracurricular pursuits as well; he
plays the violin in the Kensington Philharmonic
Orchestra and has represented Trinidad and Tobago in
target-rifle shooting with success at Bisley on many
occasions. In 2005, he won the bronze medal in the
300-metre target-rifle event at the World Masters Games
in Edmonton, Canada. He is also a member of the English
Bridge Union with the rank of Premier Regional Master.
His achievements as a research
scientist were recognised in 1990 when he was given the
Scarlet Ibis Award for outstanding achievement by the
then High Commissioner for Trinidad and Tobago in
London, Justice Ulric Cross.
To youngsters considering a career
in science, Professor Price advises that “the best
reason for doing science is because you like it and you
enjoy doing it.”
1-Also
known as electric insulators, these materials resist
electricity. Examples include rubber and glass.
2-A plastic, resistant to
chemicals and moisture, and used extensively in
containers, electrical insulation, and packaging
3-An electrical device that
can be used to store electrical energy
4-A method of making objects
from powder by heating the material until the particles
stick together
5-A rare, metallic element
that is widely used in capacitors because it readily
forms a protective oxide layer which has highly
desirable dielectric properties
6-In potential theory this
term refers to a mathematical quantity that is used to
calculate the strength and direction of an electric
field
7-Calculated by multiplying
all the terms in an infinite series, for example 0.1 x
0.01 x 0.001 x 0.0001…
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