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Hermann Arthur Jahn

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Residence
  
Southampton

Fields
  
Quantum mechanics

Name
  
Hermann Jahn


Known for
  
Jahn-Teller effect

Nationality
  
English

Born
  
May 31, 1907 Colchester, England (
1907-05-31
)

Institutions
  
Aachen University of Technology

Alma mater
  
University College, London BSc 1928 University of Leipzig PhD

Died
  
October 24, 1979, Southampton, United Kingdom

Education
  
Leipzig University, University College London

Doctoral advisor
  
Werner Heisenberg

Professor Hermann Arthur Jahn (born 31 May 1907, Colchester, England; d. 24 October 1979 Southampton) was an English scientist of German origin. With Edward Teller, he identified the Jahn–Teller effect.

Contents

Early life

He was the son of Friedrich Wilhelm Hermann Jahn and Marion May Curtiss. He attended City School on Monks Road in Lincoln.

Jahn received his Bachelor of Science degree in chemistry at University College, London in 1928. He received his PhD on 14 February 1935 under the supervision of Werner Heisenberg at the University of Leipzig. The title of his dissertation was "The rotation and oscillation of the methane molecule". From 1935-41 he did research at the Davy Faraday Research Laboratory at the Royal Institution in London.

Career

From 1941 to 1946, he was based at the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Farnborough Airfield. He was (the first) Professor of Applied Mathematics at the University of Southampton from 1949-73. He published scientific papers on quantum mechanics and group theory.

Personal life

He married Karoline Schuler in 1943 in Hendon. They had a son (born 1944) and a daughter (born 1946). Jahn died in 1979 aged 72.

References

Hermann Arthur Jahn Wikipedia