Hans Georg Möller

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Hans Georg Möller (born April 7, 1882 in Altgeringswalde (Saxony), † August 22, 1967 in Hamburg ) was a German technical physicist and taught at the University of Hamburg .

Möller passed his Abitur at the Princely School in Grimma in 1901 and did military service. In 1903 he began to study physics, mathematics and chemistry in Göttingen. a. with David Hilbert . As an assistant at the physical-chemical institute since 1906 he went with Friedrich Dolezalek to the TH Berlin . In 1908 he did his doctorate under Walther Nernst . In 1912 he completed his habilitation with a thesis on the skin effect . From 1914 he served as a captain and in 1915 he was assigned to the technical department of the radio troops. Together with u. a. Heinrich Barkhausen from the torpedo test detachment, he laid the foundations for the theory of the electron tube . He also created the theory of the vibration characteristic , which contributed to the elucidation of nonlinear vibration problems. In 1920 he completed his habilitation at the University of Hamburg and was appointed as an adjunct professor. After a call to the TH Braunschweig , he was appointed associate professor in Hamburg in 1924 and director of the Institute for Applied Physics in 1925. In 1934 he became a personal full professor; only in 1938 was a regular ordinariate established. He had a close relationship with the Röntgenmüller company (later Valvo ). Research at that time included high frequency , low current and tube technology; in the 1930s he investigated a. a. Problems of the magnetron . During the Second World War he was mainly concerned with radio measurement technology . Möller was a member of the military-oriented German Society for Technical Physics. V. In November 1933 he signed the German professors' declaration of Adolf Hitler . He was awarded the Philipp Reis badge in 1962 .

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