Ludwig Boltzmann AKA Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann Born: 20-Feb-1844 Birthplace: Vienna, Austria Died: 5-Sep-1906 Location of death: Bay of Duino, Italy Cause of death: Suicide Remains: Buried, Zentralfriedhof, Vienna, Austria
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Nationality: Austria Executive summary: Atoms and molecules Ludwig Boltzmann helped develop statistical mechanics, working independently from J. Willard Gibbs, wherein probability is used to describe the relationship between the properties of atoms and the properties of matter. In 1871, working independently from James Clerk Maxwell, he showed that a molecule's average energy of motion is the same in each direction (the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution law). Boltzmann met his future wife, Henriette von Aigentler, when she was denied entry to mathematics and physics classes at Graz, and he helped her overturn that ruling.
In a time when atomism was a new idea and widely rejected by his contemporaries, he argued strongly that only the theory of atomic structure could explain the physical world and his own work. This occasionally led to Boltzmann being cast as a kook, and he suffered from intermittent bouts of depression. He had recurring clashes with academic colleagues, and attempted suicide at least twice, succeeding when he hung himself while vacationing near Trieste. Within a few years of his death, his interpretation of the atomic world was shown to be substantially correct. Boltzmann's work formed the basis for much of modern quantum physics, and his writings eventually inspired another noted Austrian physicist, Erwin Schr�dinger.
Father: Ludwig Georg Boltzmann (tax collector, d. 1859) Mother: Katharina Pauernfeind Wife: Henriette von Aigentler (m. 17-Jul-1876, three daughters, two sons)
University: PhD, University of Vienna (1866) Teacher: Physics, University of Vienna (1867-69) Professor: Mathematics, University of Graz (1868-69) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Heidelberg (1869-71) Professor: Physics, University of Berlin (1871-73) Professor: Mathematics, University of Vienna (1873-76) Professor: Experimental Physics, University of Graz (1876-90) Administrator: President, University of Graz (1887-90) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Munich (1890-94) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Vienna (1894-1900) Professor: Physics, University of Leipzig (1900-02) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Vienna (1902-06)
Austian Imperial Academy of Sciences
Suicide Attempt 1904, 1906 Austrian Ancestry
Risk Factors: Obesity, Depression, Asthma
Author of books:
Theoretical Physics and Philosophical Problems (1974, posthumous, essays)
Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile
Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications
|