Eugen Stübler

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Eugen Stübler (born July 3, 1873 in Stuttgart , † December 15, 1930 in Berlin ) was a German mathematician and mechanical engineer.

Stübler studied in Tübingen, Göttingen, Berlin and Stuttgart from 1891 to 1899 and received his doctorate in Tübingen in 1902. In 1905 he became a private lecturer at the TH Stuttgart and was an associate professor there from 1910 to 1924. Then he went to the TH Charlottenburg in Berlin.

During the First World War he was with the artillery commission in Berlin.

He published on helical surfaces , minimal surfaces , the motion of rigid bodies (including geometric kinematics of gears and gear systems), articulation mechanisms, and ballistics.

Eugen Stübler died after a long and serious illness on December 15, 1930 at the age of 57 in Berlin. He was buried on December 19 at the Schmargendorf cemetery . The grave has not been preserved.

Fonts

  • The impulse in the motion of a rigid body, magazine f. Math. Phys., Volume 53, 1906.
  • Movement of a ball rolling on a horizontal plane with the center of gravity in the center, Stuttgart 1902 (dissertation)
  • Investigations into special minimal areas, Mathematische Annalen, Volume 75, 1914, P. 148, SUB Göttingen
  • The acceleration system when moving a rigid body, Annual Report DMV, Volume 19, 1910, pp. 177-184, SUB Göttingen

literature

  • Poggendorff, Biographical-literary concise dictionary for the history of exact science , Volume 5, 1926, pp. 1226f
  • Karl-Heinz Böttcher, Bertram Maurer, Klaus Wendel: Stuttgart Mathematicians: History of Mathematics at the University of Stuttgart from 1829 to 1945 in Biographies, Publications of the University Archives Stuttgart 2, 2008

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Family obituary notice. In: Vossische Zeitung . December 17, 1930, morning edition. P. 8.
  2. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende : Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 . P. 453.