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Otto Lehmann (physicist)

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Citizenship
  
German

Role
  
Physicist

Name
  
Otto Lehmann

Fields
  
Physics

Known for
  
Flowing crystals

Institutions
  
Aachen & Karlsruhe

Parents
  
Franz Xavier Lehmann


Otto Lehmann (physicist) wwwpersonalsotonacuktimcrystalsthatflowle

Born
  
January 13, 1855Konstanz, Germany (
1855-01-13
)

Alma mater
  
University of Strassburg

Died
  
June 17, 1922, Karlsruhe, Germany

Education
  
University of Strasbourg

Doctoral advisor
  
Paul Heinrich von Groth

Sandauge otto lehmann


Otto Lehmann (January 13, 1855 in Konstanz, Germany – June 17, 1922 in Karlsruhe) was a German physicist and "father" of liquid crystal.

Contents

Life

Otto was the son of Franz Xavier Lehmann, a mathematics teacher in the Baden-Wurtemberg school system, with a strong interest in microscopes. Otto learned to experiment and keep records of this findings. Between 1872 and 1877, Lehmann studied natural sciences at the University of Strassburg and obtained the Ph.D. under crystallographer Paul Groth. Otto used polarizers in a microscope so that he might watch for birefringence appearing in the process of crystallization.

Initially becoming a school teacher for physics, mathematics and chemistry in Mülhausen (Alsace-Lorraine), he started university teaching at the RWTH Aachen University in 1883. In 1889, he succeeded Heinrich Hertz as head of the Institute of Physics in Karlsruhe.

Lehmann received a letter from Friedrich Reinitzer asking for confirmation of some unusual observations. As Dunmur and Sluckin(2011) say

It was Lehmann's jealously guarded and increasingly prestigious microscope, not yet available off the shelf, which had attracted Reinitzer's attention. With Reinitzer's peculiar double-melting liquid, a problem in search of a scientist had met a scientist in search of a problem.

The article "On Flowing Crystals" that Lehmann wrote for Zeitschrift für Physikalische Chemie addresses directly the question of phase of matter involved, and leaves in its wake the science of liquid crystals.

Lehmann was an unsuccessful nominee for a Nobel Prize from 1913 to 1922.

Work

  • Selbstanfertigung physikalischer Apparate. Leipzig 1885.
  • Molekularphysik (i.e. Molecular physics). 2 Bde, Leipzig 1888/89.
  • Die Kristallanalyse (i.e. The Analysis of Crystals). Leipzig 1891.
  • Elektricität und Licht (i.e. Electricity and Light). Braunschweig 1895.
  • Flüssige Krystalle (i.e. Liquid Crystals). Leipzig 1904.
  • Die scheinbar lebenden Krystalle. Eßlingen 1907.
  • Die wichtigsten Begriffe und Gesetze der Physik. Berlin 1907.
  • Flüssige Kristalle und ihr scheinbares Leben. Forschungsergebnisse dargestellt in einem Kinofilm. Voss, Leipzig 1921.
  • References

    Otto Lehmann (physicist) Wikipedia