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    • Chandra Steele
    • Senior Features Writer
    • A Hertz by Any Other Name. Because of anti-semitism, the unit known as "hertz" almost became "helmholtz," for Hermann von Helmholtz, who Hertz studied under.
    • The Far Side of the Moon. On the far side of the moon lies a crater that was named after Hertz. When the moon and Earth are aligned just so, it can be seen from this planet.
    • Runs in the Family. Hertz's nephew was Gustav Hertz, who won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1925 for his work on the laws that govern the collision of electrons and atoms.
    • Office Space. Hertz researched electromagnetics while he was a lecturer at the University of Kiel. He was strung along about a professorship there and, when he finally had enough, took an offer from another institution.
    • Early Life and Education
    • Life's Work and Discoveries
    • What Hertz Missed
    • Other Scientific Interests
    • Later Life
    • Honors
    • Bibliography

    Heinrich Hertz was born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1857. His parents were Gustav Ferdinand Hertz (a lawyer) and Anna Elisabeth Pfefferkorn. Although his father was born Jewish, he converted to Christianity and the children were raised as Christians. This did not stop the Nazis from dishonoring Hertz after his death, due to the "taint" of Jewishness, b...

    After earning a Ph.D. in 1880, Hertz took up a series of professorships where he taught physics and theoretical mechanics. He married Elisabeth Doll in 1886 and they had two daughters. Hertz's doctoral dissertation focused on James Clerk Maxwell'stheories of electromagnetism. Maxwell worked in mathematical physics until his death in 1879 and formul...

    Interestingly, Heinrich Hertz did not think his experiments with electromagnetic radiation, particularly radio waves, had any practical value. His attention was focused solely on theoretical experiments. So, he proved that electromagnetic waves propagated through the air (and space). His work led others to experiment even further with other aspects...

    Hertz's scientific accomplishments weren't limited to electromagnetism. He also did a great deal of research on the topic of contact mechanics, which is the study of solid matter objects that touch each other. The big questions in this area of study have to do with the stresses the objects produce on each other, and what role friction plays in inte...

    Heinrich Hertz worked on his research and lecturing until his death on January 1, 1894. His health began failing several years prior to his death, and there was some evidence he had cancer. His final years were taken up with teaching, further research, and several operations for his condition. His final publication, a book titled "Die Prinzipien de...

    Hertz was honored not only by the use of his name for the fundamental period of a wavelength, but his name appears on a memorial medal and a crater on the Moon. An institute called the Heinrich-Hertz Institute for Oscillation Research was founded in 1928, known today as the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications, Heinrich Hertz Institute, HHI....

    “Heinrich Hertz and Electromagnetic Radiation.” AAAS - The World's Largest General Scientific Society, www.aaas.org/heinrich-hertz-and-electromagnetic-radiation. www.aaas.org/heinrich-hertz-and-ele...
    Molecular Expressions Microscopy Primer: Specialized Microscopy Techniques - Fluorescence Digital Image Gallery - Normal African Green Monkey Kidney Epithelial Cells (Vero), micro.magnet.fsu.edu/op...
    http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Biographies/Hertz_Heinrich.html“Heinrich Rudolf Hertz.” Cardan Biography, www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Biographies/Hertz_Heinrich.html.
    • Carolyn Collins Petersen
  1. Jul 15, 2024 · Heinrich Rudolf Hertz was born on February 22, 1857, and passed away on January 1, 1894, was a pioneering German physicist who made significant contributions to the understanding of electromagnetic waves. Hertz was the first to conclusively prove the existence of electromagnetic waves by engineering instruments to transmit and receive radio ...

  2. Feb 22, 2012 · Heinrich Rudolf Hertz, the man behind today's Google doodle, found what eyes could not see. Today would have been Heinrich Hertz's 155th birthday.

  3. Aug 2, 2021 · At the start of the pandemic, Hertz became the original meme stock when day traders flocked to the bankrupt car-rental company.

    • Emily Graffeo
    • Thomas Greaney And Finanzen.Net
  4. Feb 22, 2012 · Heinrich Hertz was a German physicist and mathematician best known for his discovery of what became known as wireless waves.

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  6. Jul 15, 2016 · Heinrich Hertz came to Karlsruhe in 1885 and used his time here to build on the work of the Scottish physicist James Maxwell. “Maxwell was the ingenious professor who was able to formulate the laws of propagation of electromagnetic waves in the famous Maxwell equations,” explained Krebs.