Milne was born in
Hull, Yorkshire, England. He attended
Hymers College and from there he won an open scholarship in mathematics and natural science to study at
Trinity College, Cambridge in 1914, gaining the largest number of marks which had ever been awarded in the examination. In 1916 he joined a group of mathematicians led by
A. V. Hill for the Ministry of munitions working on the ballistics of anti-aircraft gunnery, they became known as ′Hill's Brigands′. Later Milne became an expert on sound localisation. In 1917 he became a lieutenant in the
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. He was a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, 1919–1925, being assistant director of the
solar physics observatory, 1920–1924, mathematical lecturer at Trinity, 1924–1925, and university lecturer in astrophysics, 1922–1925. He was
Beyer professor of applied mathematics,
Victoria University of Manchester, 1924–1928, before his appointment as
Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics and to a fellowship at
Wadham College, Oxford, in 1928. Milne's earlier work was in mathematical astrophysics. Much of his research in the 1930s was concerned with the
theory of relativity and
cosmology. His later work, concerned with the interior structure of stars, aroused controversy. Milne was
President of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1943–1945. During World War II he again worked on ballistics. Milne married Margaret Scott Campbell on 26June 1928 at
Withington, Manchester. Campbell, from
Dornoch,
Sutherland, Scotland, was the daughter of Hugh Fraser Campbell, an
advocate in
Aberdeen. Milne's brother, Geoffrey, then a lecturer in
agricultural chemistry at the
University of Leeds, was best man. Margaret Scott Milne died on the 5October 1938 at
Oxford. He married secondly, Beatrice Brevoort Renwick, the third daughter of William Whetten Renwick, on 22June 1940 at
St Andrew's Church, Oxford. William Whetten was the nephew of American architect
James Renwick Jr., and designed
Saints Peter and Paul, a
Roman Catholic cathedral in
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. Beatrice Brevoort Milne died at Oxford on 28August 1945, aged just 32 years. Milne died of a heart attack in
Dublin, Ireland, while preparing to give a set of lectures. These can be found written down in one of his last published books:
Modern Cosmology and the Christian Idea of God (1952). ==Research into stellar atmospheres and structure==