Henry Moseley, the British physicist who died 90 years ago in Turkey, was feted in that country with a World Year of Physics event at Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University on 29–30 September.

With the outbreak of World War I, Moseley joined the British Army in 1914 at age 26 and was sent to the Dardanelles to fight against Turkey. He fell at Gallipoli on 10 August 1915. Despite his short life, Moseley made lasting contributions to science. He is best known for his studies of x-ray spectra, which led to Moseley’s law and to the arrangement of elements by atomic number rather than by weight in the periodic table.

Moseley is a famous scientist associated with Turkey, says Mehmet E. Özel, the astrophysicist who organized the September meeting. “Of course he is British, but he is lying in our land. We consider him part of our heritage.”

About 100 physicists...

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