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Georg Hermann Quincke

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Nationality
  
German

Fields
  
Physics

Role
  
Physicist


Name
  
Georg Quincke

Siblings
  
Heinrich Quincke

Georg Hermann Quincke

Born
  
19 November 1834 Frankfurt (Oder) (
1834-11-19
)

Died
  
January 13, 1924, Heidelberg, Germany

Education
  
University of Konigsberg, Humboldt University of Berlin

Doctoral advisor
  
Heinrich Gustav Magnus, Franz Ernst Neumann

Similar People
  
Heinrich Quincke, Karl Ferdinand Braun, Philipp Lenard, Heinrich Gustav Magnus, August Kundt

Doctoral students
  
K. F. Braun, P. Lenard

Georg Hermann Quincke (November 19, 1834 – January 13, 1924) was a German physicist.

Biography

Born at Frankfurt (Oder), Quincke was the son of prominent physician Geheimer Medicinal-Rath Hermann Quincke and the older brother of physician Heinrich Quincke.

Quincke received his Ph. D. in 1858 at Berlin, having previously studied also at Königsberg and at Heidelberg. He became privatdocent at Berlin in 1859, professor at Berlin in 1865, professor at Würzburg in 1872, and in 1875 was called to be professor of physics at Heidelberg, where he remained until his retirement in 1907. His doctor's dissertation was on the subject of the capillary constant of mercury, and his investigations of all capillary phenomena are classical.

Quincke also did important work in the experimental study of the reflection of light, especially from metallic surfaces, and carried on prolonged researches on the subject of the influence of electric forces upon the constants of different forms of matter, modifying the dissociation hypothesis of Clausius.

"Quincke's interference tube" is an apparatus used to demonstrate interference phenomena of sound waves.

Quincke received a D. C. L. from Oxford and an LL. D. from Cambridge and from Glasgow and was elected an honorary fellow of the Royal Society of London. In 1885 he published Geschichte des physikalischen Instituts der Universität Heidelberg.

Quincke died in Heidelberg at age 89.

References

Georg Hermann Quincke Wikipedia