Carl Pulfrich Prize

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Carl Pulfrich Prize is awarded for special scientific achievements in the fields of photogrammetry , remote sensing and geosciences . It is named after the German physicist and optician Carl Pulfrich (1858–1927). Pulfrich is considered to be the founder of stereophotogrammetry .

The prize was donated in 1968 by Carl Zeiss Oberkochen for special scientific, application-related or constructive activities in the field of surveying in connection with geodetic or photogrammetric instruments and was awarded by the company every two years until 1997.

In 2001 the prize was awarded by the Z / I Imaging joint venture between Carl Zeiss and Intergraph for services specifically in the fields of photogrammetry and remote sensing, and in 2005 the field of geosciences was added. Since Leica Geosystems took over the photogrammetric department from Zeiss in 2011, the latter has donated the award.

Award winners

  • 1969 - Manfred Bonatz
  • 1971 - Karl Kraus
  • 1973 - Jürgen Müller
  • 1975 - Manfred Ruopp
  • 1977 - Juhani Hakkarainen, Hartmut Schmidt
  • 1979 - Hermann A. Klein
  • 1981 - Heribert Kahmen
  • 1983 - Charles C. Counselman III
  • 1985 - Wolfgang Göpfert
  • 1987 - Wolfgang Förstner , Heinrich Schewe
  • 1989 - Peter Lohmann
  • 1991 - Henrik Haggrén, Aloysius Wehr
  • 1993 - Christian Beers, Kurt Nowak
  • 1995 - Hans-Gerd Maas, Joachim Mönicke
  • 1997 - Peter Frieß, Joachim Lindenberger
  • 2001 - Claus Brenner
  • 2005 - Zhang Li
  • 2007 - Markus Gerke, Sönke Müller, Andreas Busch
  • 2009 - Devrim Akca, Michael Cramer
  • 2011 - Heiko Hirschmüller
  • 2013 - Nicholas C. Coops, Norbert Haala
  • 2015 - Christoph Stecha
  • 2017 - Franz Rottensteiner
  • 2019 - Bisheng Yang

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German Society for Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Geoinformation : Carl Pulfrich Prize
  2. ^ Franz Rottensteiner awarded the Carl Pulfrich Prize. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover , accessed on March 20, 2019 .
  3. ^ Carl Pulfrich Award. University of Stuttgart, Institute for Photogrammetry, accessed on March 20, 2019 .