Rudolf Schüssler (mathematician)

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Rudolf Schüssler , also Rudolf Schüßler (born April 5, 1865 in Vienna , † January 15, 1942 ibid) was an Austrian mathematician .

Life

After graduating from the Mariahilfer Communal-Real- und Obergymnasium at the University of Vienna , Rudolf Schüssler studied mathematics and physics from 1882, passed the teaching examination in 1888 and was awarded a Dr. phil. PhD . In 1890 he became an assistant at the chair for descriptive geometry at the Vienna University of Technology , moved to the Imperial and Royal Technical University of Graz in 1893 and qualified as a professor there in 1895 for descriptive geometry. In 1896 he was made associate professor and in 1902 full professor.

He served from 1900 to 1903 and from 1913 to 1915 as a board member of the mechanical engineering school and from 1921 to 1923 as board member of the building construction school. In addition, Rudolf Schüssler was from 1904 to 1905 as the successor to Adolf Klingatsch (1864–1926) and from 1918 to 1919 as the successor to Franz Drobny (1863–1924) rector of the Graz University of Technology. In 1930 he retired. From around 1939 Rudolf Schüssler lived in Vienna again.

On July 11, 1921, Rudolf Schüssler was elected a member ( matriculation number 3455 ) of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina .

Fonts

  • Orthogonal axonometry. A textbook for self-study. Teubner, Leipzig and Berlin 1905 ( digitized version ).
  • About circles of curvature of conic sections. In: Archive of Mathematics and Physics, 3, 11, Teubner, Leipzig and Berlin 1907, pp. 318–327 ( digitized version ).

literature

Web links

Wikisource: Rudolf Schüssler  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Albert Wangerin , August Gutzmer (ed.): Leopoldina . Official organ of the Leopoldine-Carolinian German Academy of Natural Scientists. 57th issue. On commission from Max Niemeyer, Halle 1921, p. 34 ( biodiversitylibrary.org ).