Friedrich Eisenlohr (mathematician)
Friedrich Eisenlohr (born July 16, 1831 in Mannheim , † July 21, 1904 in Heidelberg ) was a mathematician.
His brother was the Egyptologist August Eisenlohr .
From 1849 he studied in Göttingen, Berlin and Heidelberg, where he received his Dr. phil. received his doctorate . Two years later he received his habilitation and in 1872 he became an associate professor in Heidelberg. Friedrich Eisenlohr rests in the Heidelberg Bergfriedhof .
Publications
- About the ratio of the direction of oscillation of light to the plane of polarization and the determination of this ratio through diffraction. In: Poggendorff's annals of physics and chemistry. New series, Volume 104, Leipzig 1858, pp. 337–346.
- Derivation of the formulas for the intensity of the light reflected, refracted and diffracted on the surface of two isotropic means. In: Annals of Physics and Chemistry. Neue Reihe, Volume 104, 1858, pp. 346-376
- About the explanation of the color dispersion and the behavior of light in crystals. In: Annals of Physics and Chemistry. Neue Reihe, Volume 109, 1860, pp. 215–244
- About area mapping. In: Journal for pure and applied mathematics. Volume 72, 1870, pp. 143-153
- Critical journal for chemistry, physics and mathematics. ed. in Heidelberg by A. Kekule, F. Eisenlohr, G. Lewinstein and M. Cantor, Verlag F. Enke, Erlangen 1858 [1]
Supplementary secondary literature
Dagmar Drüll: Heidelberger Gelehrtenlexikon 1803-1932 . (Ed.): Rectorate of the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität-Heidelberg. Springer Berlin Heidelberg Tokyo. 2012. 324 pp. ISBN 978-3642707612
Individual evidence
- ^ Günter Kern: The Development of the Subject Mathematics at the University of Heidelberg 1835 - 1914 . 1992, pp. 64-67. ( digital , pp. 28–29.)
Web links
Commons : Friedrich Eisenlohr - Collection of images, videos and audio files
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Eisenlohr, Friedrich |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German mathematician |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 16, 1831 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Mannheim |
DATE OF DEATH | July 21, 1904 |
Place of death | Heidelberg |