|
<<Up Contents
Wilhelm Eduard WeberRedirected from Wilhelm Weber
Wilhelm Eduard Weber (October 24, 1804 - June 23, 1891) was a noted physicist.
He was born in Wittenberg, where
his father, Michael Weber, was professor of theology. William was the
second of three brothers, all of whom were distinguished by an aptitude
for the study of science. After the dissolution of the University of
Wittenberg his father was transferred to Halle in 1815. William had
received his first lessons from his father, but was now sent to the
Orphan Asylum and Grammar School at Halle. After that he entered the
University, and devoted himself to natural philosophy. He distinguished
himself so much in his classes, and by original work, that after taking
his degree of Doctor and becoming a Privatdozent he was appointed
Professor Extraordinary of natural philosophy at Halle.
In 1831, on the recommendation of Gauss, he was called to Göttingen as
professor of physics, although but twenty-seven years of age. His
lectures were interesting, instructive, and suggestive. Weber thought
that, in order to thoroughly understand physics and apply it to daily
life, mere lectures, though illustrated by experiments, were
insufficient, and he encouraged his students to experiment themselves,
free of charge, in the college laboratory. As a student of twenty years
he, with his brother, Ernest Henry Weber, Professor of Anatomy at
Leipzig, had written a book on the Wave Theory and Fluidity, which
brought its authors a considerable reputation. Acoustics was a
favourite science of his, and he published numerous papers upon it in
Poggendorffs Annalen, Schweigger's Jahrbücher für Chemie und Physik, and the musical journal Carcilia. The 'mechanism of walking in mankind'
was another study, undertaken in conjunction with his younger brother,
Edward Weber. These important investigations were published between the
years 1825 and 1838.
Displaced by the Hanoverian Government for his liberal opinions in
politics Weber travelled for a time, visiting England, among other
countries, and became professor of physics in Leipzig from 1843 to 1849,
when he was reinstalled at Göttingen. One of his most important works
was the Atlas des Erdmagnetismus ("atlas of geomagnetism"), a series of magnetic maps, and it was
chiefly through his efforts that magnetic observatories were instituted.
He studied magnetism with Gauss, and in 1864 published his
Electrodynamic Proportional Measures containing a system of absolute
measurements for electric currents, which forms the basis of those in
use. Weber died in Göttingen.
| Elsewhere |  | |
Search engine
Web directory
|
CONTENTS:
|