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Martin Schwarzschild

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Nationality
  
American

Parents
  
Karl Schwarzschild

Awards
  
Bruce Medal

Name
  
Martin Schwarzschild

Fields
  
Physics, Astronomy

Role
  
Astrophysicist


Martin Schwarzschild httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
May 31, 1912 Potsdam, Germany (
1912-05-31
)

Alma mater
  
Institut fur Astrophysik Gottingen

Known for
  
Stellar structure and evolution

Notable awards
  
Karl Schwarzschild Medal (1959) Henry Draper Medal (1960) Bruce Medal (1965) Brouwer Award (1992) Balzan Prize (1994) National Medal of Science (1997) Fellow of the Royal Society

Died
  
April 10, 1997, Langhorne, Pennsylvania, United States

Education
  
University of Gottingen (1933–1935)

Books
  
Structure and evolution of the stars

Institutions
  
Princeton University

Martin Schwarzschild | Wikipedia audio article


Martin Schwarzschild (May 31, 1912 – April 10, 1997) was a German-born American astrophysicist. He was the son of German physicist Karl Schwarzschild and the nephew of the Swiss astrophysicist Robert Emden.

Contents

Biography

Schwarzschild was born in Potsdam into a distinguished German Jewish academic family. In line with a request in his father's will, his family moved to Göttingen in 1916. Schwarzschild studied at the University of Göttingen and took his doctoral examination in December 1936. He left Germany in 1936 for Norway and then the United States. Schwarzschild served in the US army intelligence. He was awarded the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star for his wartime service. After returning to the US, he married fellow astronomer Barbara Cherry. In 1947, Martin Schwarzschild joined his lifelong friend, Lyman Spitzer at Princeton University. Spitzer died 10 days before Schwarzschild.

Schwarzschild's work in the fields of stellar structure and stellar evolution led to improved understanding of pulsating stars, differential solar rotation, post-main sequence evolutionary tracks on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (including how stars become red giants), hydrogen shell sources, the helium flash, and the ages of star clusters. With Fred Hoyle, he computed some of the first stellar models to correctly ascend the red giant branch by steadily burning hydrogen in a shell around the core. He and Härm were the first to compute stellar models going through thermal pulses on the asymptotic giant branch and later showed that these models develop convective zones between the helium- and hydrogen-burning shells, which can bring nuclear ashes to the visible surface. Schwarzschild’s 1958 book Structure and Evolution of the Stars taught a generation of astrophysicists how to apply electronic computers to the computation of stellar models.

In the 1950s and ’60s he headed the Stratoscope projects, which took instrumented balloons to unprecedented heights. The first Stratoscope produced high resolution images of solar granules and sunspots, confirming the existence of convection in the solar atmosphere, and the second obtained infrared spectra of planets, red giant stars, and the nuclei of galaxies. In his later years he made significant contributions toward understanding the dynamics of elliptical galaxies. Schwarzschild was renowned as a teacher and held major leadership positions in several scientific societies.

In the 1980s, Schwarzschild applied his numerical skills to building models for triaxial galaxies.

Dr. Schwarzschild was the Eugene Higgins Professor Emeritus of Astronomy at Princeton University, where he spent most of his professional life.

Awards

  • Karl Schwarzschild Medal (1959)
  • Henry Norris Russell Lectureship (1960)
  • Henry Draper Medal of the National Academy of Sciences (1960)
  • Eddington Medal (1963)
  • Bruce Medal (1965)
  • Rittenhouse Medal (1966)
  • Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1969)
  • Brouwer Award (1992)
  • Balzan Prize (1994, with Fred Hoyle)
  • National Medal of Science (1997)
  • Named after him

  • Asteroid 4463 Marschwarzschild
  • References

    Martin Schwarzschild Wikipedia