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Isolde Hausser

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Citizenship
  
Name
  
Isolde Hausser


Residence
  
Germany

Fields
  
Isolde Hausser Wikipedia Isolde Hausser YouTube

Born
  
December 7, 1889Berlin, German Empire (
1889-12-07
)

Thesis
  
Erzeugung und Empfang kurzer elektrischer Wellen ("Production and reception of short electrical waves") (1914)

Spouse
  
Karl Wilhelm Hausser (m. 1918, 1887-1933)

Children
  
Karl Hermann Hausser (1919-2001)

Died
  
October 5, 1951, Heidelberg, Germany

Alma mater
  
Humboldt University of Berlin

Isolde Hausser (née Ganswindt, December 7, 1889 – October 5, 1951) was a German physicist. She became the head of a department of the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research (then Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research) in Heidelberg in 1935.

Life and work

Ganswindt was the daughter of Hermann Ganswindt and his first wife Anna Minna (née Fritsche, 1866-1911). After graduating from the Chamisso School in Berlin-Schöneberg in 1909, she began studying physics, mathematics, and philosophy at the University of Berlin. In 1914, she received a doctorate degree in physics with a dissertation titled Erzeugung und Empfang kurzer elektrischer Wellen ("Production and reception of short electrical waves").

From 1914 to 1929 she worked as a staff member in the research department of Telefunken in Berlin under the direction of Hans Rukop (1883-1958), with whom she also published several research papers. She married the physicist Karl Wilhelm Hausser (1887-1933) in 1918, with whom she had a son, Karl Hermann Hausser (1919-2001). In 1929 she joined the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research in Heidelberg, where she became head of an independent department in 1935. The Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research later became the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research. She worked there until her death in 1951.

Isolde Hausser made contributions to vacuum tube research, the physics underlying radiation therapy, radar technology, and research on radiation in medicine.

The Isolde-Hausser-Straße ("Isolde Hausser street") in Königs Wusterhausen is named after her.

References

Isolde Hausser Wikipedia


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