Hugo Mosler

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Hugo Mosler as a corps student in the winter semester 1895/1896

Hugo Bruno Hans Mosler (born April 16, 1875 in Berlin ; † December 24, 1956 in Düsseldorf ) was a German professor of telecommunications and radio technology at the Technical University of Braunschweig and brewery director .

Life

Hugo Mosler began studying physics at the Technische Hochschule Berlin-Charlottenburg in the winter semester of 1894/95 , where he joined the Corps Saxonia-Berlin in the same semester. After graduating as an engineer, he produced a thesis on the topic: The temperature coefficient of magnetism of some salt solutions of the iron group with special focus on iron chloride to with which he in 1901 on the University of Leipzig Dr. phil. received his doctorate . His dissertation was published in extracts in the Annalen der Physik .

Just a few years later, after completing his habilitation in 1904, he was a private lecturer in electrical engineering at the Technical University of Braunschweig. In 1911 he was appointed associate professor for telecommunications and radio technology at the TH Braunschweig.

He took part in the First World War as an intelligence officer in higher staff. He has received several awards. His last rank was Captain of the Reserve . During the war his teaching and research activities were suspended.

Hugo Mosler was a pioneer of telecommunications and radio technology in Germany. Nevertheless, in the 1920s, he decided to give up teaching and research in order to take on leading positions in the brewing industry. Most recently, he was on the Supervisory Board of Schwabenbräu AG and its subsidiaries.

In 1951 he was awarded membership by the Kösener Corps Friso-Luneburgia Cologne.

Fonts

  • The temperature coefficient of the magnetism of some salt solutions of the iron group with special reference to iron chloride. Dissertation University of Leipzig 1901.
  • Design and calculation of self-starters for electric elevators with push-button control. Berlin 1904.
  • Contribution to the generation of weakly damped vibrations. In: Electrotechnical Journal. Volume 28, 1907, pp. 304-305, 426.
  • Introduction to modern wireless telegraphy and its practical uses. Braunschweig 1920.
  • Introduction to modern radio technology and its practical use. Braunschweig 1926 (with Gustav Leithäuser).

literature

  • Carl Weigandt: History of the Corps Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen 1867-1967. Aachen 1968.

Individual evidence

  1. Annalen der Physik, 1901, Vol. 311, Issue 9
  2. Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau, 1904, No. 3
  3. ^ Friedrich Strobel: Address book of the living physicists, mathematicians and astronomers. 1905, p. 26
  4. Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau 1911
  5. Supplementary program for the academic year 1918-1919 of the Carolo-Wilhelmina ( Memento of April 8, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 2.9 MB)