Gustav Ludwig Hertz(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-07-20)
A nephew of the noted physicist Heinrich Hertz, he studied at the universities of Gottingen, Munich, and Berlin, and was appointed an assistant in physics at the University of Berlin in 1913, where he began to work with Franck.
In 1925Hertz was appointed professor of physics at the University of Halle and in 1928 professor of physics at the Technische Hochschule in Berlin.
Hertz, from 1945 until 1954, was engaged in research in the Soviet Union.
Hertz(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-07-20)
In 1885, at the age of 28, Heinrich Hertz was appointed professor of physics at the Karlsruhe University.
A portrait of Heinrich Hertz is one of the 56 portraits, in relief, of eminent citizens of Hamburg, on the columns in the entrance hall of the Rathaus (Town Hall).
Heirnrich Hertz' nephew GustavLudwigHertz was a 1925Nobel Prize winner in Physics (together with James Franck) "for their discovery of the laws governing the impact of an electron upon an atom" and Gustav's son Carl Hellmuth Hertz invented medical ultrasonography and ink jet printing.
In 1889, Hertz was appointed professor of physics at the University of Bonn, where he continued his research on the discharge of electricity in rarefied gases.
In 1925GustavHertz was appointed professor of physics at the University of Halle and in 1928 professor of physics at the Technische Hochschule in Berlin.
GustavHertz was engaged in research in the Soviet Union from 1945 until 1954.
Hertz, Heinrich Rudolf (1857-1894), German physicist, born in Hamburg, and educated at the University of Berlin.
Hertz proved that electricity can be transmitted in electromagnetic waves, which travel at the speed of light and which possess many other properties of light.
Before Hertz gained professorships in Karlsruhe and Bonn, he had studied under the famous scientist Hermann von Helmholtz in Bonn, and it was Helmholtz who encouraged Hertz to attempt to win the science prize that led to some of Hertz's most important discoveries.
Hertz, Gustav Ludwig(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-07-20)
Hertz resigned from this post for political reasons in 1935 to return to industry as director of a research laboratory of the Siemens Company.
Hertz's early researches, for his thesis, involved studies on the infrared absorption of carbon dioxide in relation to pressure and partial pressure.
Hertz has published many papers, alone, with Franck, and with Kloppers, on the quantitative exchange of energy between electrons and atoms, and on the measurement of ionization potentials.
Carl Hellmuth Hertz (1920-1990) was the son of GustavLudwigHertz.
However a friend of his father, who was a Nobel Prize laureate, arranged for Hertz to be freed and also found him a job in Lund, Sweden so that he could leave the States while still not having to return to Germany.
There, he would develop medical ultrasonography and serve as the first professor of electrical measurements at Lund University.
in full GustavLudwigHertz German physicist who, with James Franck, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1925 for the Franck-Hertz experiment, which confirmed the quantum theory that energy can be absorbed by an atom only in definite amounts and provided an important confirmation of the Bohr atomic model.
One of themthe discovery of electromagnetic radiationwas the achievement of Heinrich Hertz, a German physicist.
A leader of the regionalist movement in German fiction, Gustav Frenssen is remembered chiefly for his novels of peasant life.
Information on Gustav Ludwig Hertz(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-07-20)
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A nephew of Heinrich Hertz, he obtained his doctorate at Berlin in 1911.
He became an assistant at the physics institute there in 1913 and began his collaboration with James FRANCK which led to the discovery of quantized energy transfer in inelastic collisions between electrons and atoms.
Because of his Jewish descent Hertz was forced to resign a university post in 1934, but he remained in Germany throughout World War II, working for the firm of Siemens.
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Gustav - Gustav Hertz - Biography(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-07-20)
Commemorating the 200th anniversary of Gustav Theodor Fechner at
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gustav ludwig hertz(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-07-20)
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Then, he said, there will be the company now own health issues, management of dollars each other groups that confirms the savings from one of the refusal.
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" At the time of this letter, Hertz was working in Berlin as Director of the Siemens and Halske Company's research laboratory, a position the Nazi government allowed him to hold despite his wife Ellen's anti-Nazi sentiments and the fact that his father was a Jew.
He attended the Johanneum School in Hamburg before commencing his university education at Göttingen in 1906; he subsequently studied at the Universities of Munich and Berlin, graduating in 1911.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
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