Sir Edward Sabine
High-energy pulses of solar wind from sunspot activity ("solar bursts" or "plasma bubbles") travel from the Sun to the Earth at speeds exceeding 500 miles per second. The pulses distort the Earth's magnetic field and produce geomagnetic storms that disrupt the Earth's environment. Detail from artist's iIllustration by © K. Endo, Nikkei Science, Inc., Japan

Born: 14 October 1788, Dublin, Ireland
Died: 26 June 1883, Richmond, Surrey, England

Education: Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, London

Edward Sabine was an Irish geophysicist, astronomer, and explorer, who made extensive pendulum measurements to determine the shape of the earth, and established magnetic observatories to  relate sunspot activity with disturbances in terrestrial magnetism.

Sabine was commissioned in the Royal Artillery, served in  Gibraltar and Canada, and eventually rose to the rank of major-general in 1859, retiring in 1877.

In 1818, he travelled as the expedition's astronomer with his friend, Sir Clark Ross, to find the North-West Passage. He also joined the 1819-20 Arctic expedition of William Parry. During 1821-23, Sabine travelled in the Southern hemisphere, using careful pendulum experiments to determine the shape of the earth.

He devoted the rest of his life to a study of terrestrial magnetism. He assisted in the 1926 research of Britain's terrestrial magnetism with the English mathematician, Charles Babbage, followed by his own additional survey during the 1850's.
Sunspot Cycle (1850 - 1975)  (source)

As director of an international project to collect mesurements of the earth's magnetic field, beginning in 1939, he established a number of observatories worldwide. Correlating this accumulated data together with measurements of sunspot activity made by German astronomer, Samuel Schwabe, Sabine saw an important relationship.

On 6 April 1852, Sabine announced that the 11 year sunspot cycle was "absolutely identical" with the geomagnetic cycle. Later, using a larger dataset, Rudolf Wolf confirmed this fact. Since Newton's explanation of the effect of the sun's gravity on earth, this was the first new phenomenon of the sun interacting with the earth. Thus began continuing studies of the solar-terrestrial activity.

During the 1840's, he was involved with reforms of the Royal Society. He was also active with the British Society for the Advancement of Science. His political maneuvering caused great emnity from some scientists. He was even accused by some of falsifying data, though he may only have been naïve in using numbers.*

A Fellow since 1818, Sabine served as the Royal Society's president (1861-71), Sir Edward Sabine was knighted in 1869. The Sabine gull was named after him. His brother, Joseph Sabine (1770-1837) was a noted botanist.

LINKS:

Solar Activity and Geomagnetic Storms: The First 40 Years - includes Sabine's contributions.

Reducing the risk from geomagnetic hazards by the US Geological Survey.

The Toronto Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory (1855). Photo.

* Reference: Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, by Isaac Asimov, 2nd Ed. (1982).