Max Born
1882 CE–1970 CE · Breslau (Wrocław)
Max Born (German: [ˈmaks ˈbɔʁn] ; 11 December 1882 – 5 January 1970) was a German–British theoretical physicist who was instrumental in the development of quantum mechanics. He also made contributions to solid-state physics and optics, and supervised the work of a number of notable physicists in the 1920s and 1930s. He shared the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics with Walther Bothe "for his fundamental research in quantum mechanics, especially for his statistical interpretation of the wavefunction." Born entered the University of Göttingen in 1904, where he met the three renowned mathematicians Felix Klein, David Hilbert, and Hermann Minkowski. He wrote his Ph.D. thesis on the subject of the stability of elastic wires and tapes, winning the university's Philosophy Faculty Prize. In 1905, he began researching special relativity with Minkowski, and subsequently wrote his habilitation thesis on the Thomson model of the atom. A chance meeting with Fritz Haber in Berlin in 1918 led to discussion of how an ionic compound is formed when a metal reacts with a halogen, which is now known as the Born–Haber cycle. During World War I, Born was originally placed as a radio operator, but his specialist knowledge led to his being moved to research duties on sound ranging. In 1921 Born returned to Göttingen, where he arranged another chair for his long-time friend and colleague James Franck. Under Born, Göttingen became one of the world's foremost centres for physics. In 1925, Born and Werner Heisenberg formulated the matrix mechanics representation of quantum mechanics. The following year, he formulated the now-standard interpretation of the probability density function for ψ*ψ in the Schrödinger equation, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1954. His influence extended far beyond his own research: Max Delbrück, Siegfried Flügge, Friedrich Hund, Pascual Jordan, Maria Goeppert Mayer, Lothar Nordheim, Robert Oppenheimer, and Victor Weisskopf all received their Ph.D. degrees under Born at Göttingen, and his assistants included Enrico Fermi, Werner Heisenberg, Gerhard Herzberg, Friedrich Hund, Wolfgang Pauli, Léon Rosenfeld, Edward Teller, and Eugene Wigner. In January 1933, when the Nazi Party came to power in Germany, Born, who was born into a Jewish family, was suspended from his professorship at the University of Göttingen. He emigrated to the United Kingdom, where he took a job at St John's College, Cambridge, and wrote a popular science book, The Restless Universe, as well as Atomic Physics, which soon became a standard textbook. In October 1936, he was appointed Tait Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, where, working with German-born assistants E. Walter Kellermann and Klaus Fuchs, he continued his research into physics. He became a naturalised British subject on 31 August 1939, one day before the German invasion of Poland that started World War II in Europe. He remained in Edinburgh until 1952, when he retired to Bad Pyrmont, West Germany, and died in a hospital in Göttingen on 5 January 1970.
Adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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Breslau (Wrocław)Silesia
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About Breslau (Wrocław)
Breslau (Polish Wrocław), the principal city of Silesia (today in southwestern Poland), had a large and influential Jewish community in the modern era. In 1854 it became home to the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau, the first modern rabbinical seminary in Central Europe and a leading center of Wissenschaft des Judentums; its founding head was Rabbi Zacharias Frankel, the founder of the positive-historical school of Judaism.
In Breslau (Wrocław) at the same time
Robert Bunsen, Ferdinand Cohn, Rudolf Lipschitz, Fritz Haber
Across the traditions, in Breslau (Wrocław) at the same time
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with Max Born’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
Across the traditions
- Salomon Plessner· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Heinrich Graetz· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Moses Samuel Zuckermandel· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Solomon Schechter· Cambridge
- Markus Brann· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Karl Barth· Göttingen
- C. S. Lewis· Cambridge
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Ephraim E. Urbach· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Thomas Merton· Cambridge
- Yosef ben Porat· Breslau (Wrocław)
- Lord Jonathan Sacks· Cambridge
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Max Born’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
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