Franz Arthur Schulze

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Franz Arthur Schulze (born August 27, 1872 in Rabenau (Hesse) , † December 4, 1942 in Marburg ) was Professor of Theoretical Physics at the Philipps University of Marburg .

Franz Arthur Schulze was a son of the zoologist and later founding director of the Zoological Institute in Berlin, Franz Eilhard Schulze . Arthur Schulze studied under Hermann Helmholtz and received his doctorate in Berlin in 1897. He went to Marburg as an assistant to Franz Richarz (physicist) and was there since 1902 a private lecturer in physics. He was first associate professor (1919), later full professor (1922–1937). His specialty was the theory of relativity . In addition, he was interested in acoustics in the border area between physics and physiology . In 1918 Arthur Schulze was elected a member of the Leopoldina . In November 1933 he signed the professors' declaration of Adolf Hitler at German universities and colleges . His brother was the Berlin chemist Arnold Schulze († 1946, since 1920 Arnold Schulze-Forster). The children Dora (born 1909) and Franz emerged from his marriage.

Fonts

  • The great physicists and their achievements , 1910
  • Mithrsg .: Repertorium der Physik , Teubner, Leipzig 1915 ff (repr. 2010)
  • The red shift in the solar spectrum , Zeitschrift für Physik, 5 (1921), 371–73.

Web links

Wikisource: Franz Arthur Schulze  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. see Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg (HStAMR), Best. 915 No. 5763, p. 388 ( digitized version ).
  2. Arthur Schulze's membership entry at the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina , accessed on February 12, 2016.