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Wilhelm Eduard Weber

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Nationality
  
Germany

Name
  
Wilhelm Weber

Siblings
  
Ernst Heinrich Weber

Fields
  
Role
  
Physicist

Wilhelm Eduard Weber httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Born
  
Wilhelm Eduard Weber24 October 1804Wittenberg, Saxony, Holy Roman Empire (
1804-10-24
)

Institutions
  
University of GottingenUniversity of HalleUniversity of Leipzig

Alma mater
  
University of HalleUniversity of Gottingen

Doctoral advisor
  
Johann Salomo Christoph Schweigger

Doctoral students
  
Ernst AbbeFriedrich KohlrauschEduard Riecke

Died
  
June 23, 1891, Gottingen, Germany

Books
  
Mechanics of the human walking apparatus

Education
  
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, University of Gottingen

Similar People
  
Ernst Heinrich Weber, Friedrich Kohlrausch, Johann Schweigger, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Ernst Abbe

Wilhelm Eduard Weber


Wilhelm Eduard Weber ( [ˈveːba]; 24 October 1804 – 23 June 1891) was a German physicist and, together with Carl Friedrich Gauss, inventor of the first electromagnetic telegraph.

Contents

Wilhelm Eduard Weber Wilhelm Eduard Weber prkopnk telegrafu ivotopis

Wilhelm Eduard Weber


Early years

Wilhelm Eduard Weber VL People per155

Weber was born in Wittenberg, where his father, Michael Weber, was professor of theology. Wilhelm was the second of three brothers, all of whom were distinguished by an aptitude for science. After the dissolution of the University of Wittenberg his father was transferred to Halle in 1815. William had received his first lessons from his father, but was now sent to the Orphan Asylum and Grammar School at Halle. After that he entered the University, and devoted himself to natural philosophy. He distinguished himself so much in his classes, and by original work, that after taking his degree of Doctor and becoming a Privatdozent he was appointed Professor Extraordinary of natural philosophy at Halle.

Career

Wilhelm Eduard Weber Wilhelm Eduard Weber prkopnk telegrafu ivotopis

In 1831, on the recommendation of Carl Friedrich Gauss, he was hired by the university of Gottingen as professor of physics, at the age of twenty-seven. His lectures were interesting, instructive, and suggestive. Weber thought that, in order to thoroughly understand physics and apply it to daily life, mere lectures, though illustrated by experiments, were insufficient, and he encouraged his students to experiment themselves, free of charge, in the college laboratory. As a student of twenty years he, with his brother, Ernst Heinrich Weber, Professor of Anatomy at Leipzig, had written a book on the Wave Theory and Fluidity, which brought its authors a considerable reputation. Acoustics was a favourite science of his, and he published numerous papers upon it in Poggendorffs Annalen, Schweigger's Jahrbucher fur Chemie und Physik, and the musical journal Carcilia. The 'mechanism of walking in mankind' was another study, undertaken in conjunction with his younger brother, Eduard Weber. These important investigations were published between the years 1825 and 1838. Gauss and Weber constructed the first electromagnetic telegraph in 1833, which connected the observatory with the institute for physics in Gottingen.

In December 1837, the Hannovarian government dismissed Weber, one of the Gottingen Seven, from his post at the university for political reasons. Weber then travelled for a time, visiting England, among other countries, and became professor of physics in Leipzig from 1843 to 1849, when he was reinstated at Gottingen. One of his most important works, co-authored with Carl Friedrich Gauss and Carl Wolfgang Benjamin Goldschmidt, was Atlas des Erdmagnetismus: nach den Elementen der Theorie entworfen (Atlas of Geomagnetism: Designed according to the elements of the theory), a series of magnetic maps, and it was chiefly through his efforts that magnetic observatories were instituted. He studied magnetism with Gauss, and during 1864 published his Electrodynamic Proportional Measures containing a system of absolute measurements for electric currents, which forms the basis of those in use. Weber died in Gottingen, where he is buried in the same cemetery as Max Planck and Max Born.

He was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1855.

In 1856 with Rudolf Kohlrausch (1809–1858) he demonstrated that the ratio of electrostatic to electromagnetic units produced a number that matched the value of the then known speed of light. This finding led to Maxwell's conjecture that light is an electromagnetic wave. This also led to Weber's development of his theory of electrodynamics. Also, the first usage of the letter "c" to denote the speed of light was in an 1856 paper by Kohlrausch and Weber.

The SI unit of magnetic flux, the weber (symbol: Wb) is named after him.

References

Wilhelm Eduard Weber Wikipedia