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Wilhelm Carl Werner Otto Fritz Franz Wien ( 13 tháng 1 năm 1864 - 30 tháng 8 năm 1928) là một nhà vật lý người Đức. Ông đã có công nghiên cứu các lý thuyết về nhiệt và điện từ để viết lên Định luật dịch chuyển Wien, hay còn được gọi là Định luật bức xạ Wien, định luật ...
Wilhelm Wien. (Gaffke, actual Polonia, 1864 - Munich, Alemania, 1928) Físico alemán. Estudió en las universidades de Gotinga, Heidelberg y Berlín, y en 1890 pasó a ser ayudante de Hermann von Helmholtz en el Instituto Imperial de Física y Tecnología de Charlottenburg. A lo largo de su vida fue asimismo profesor de física en las ...
Wilhelm Wien was a German physicist and Nobel-Prize winner who pioneered the study of quantum physics. Wien was born in East Prussia in 1864 to a landholding family. He broke away from his father’s life as a gentleman farmer to study mathematics and physics at the Universities of Göttingen and Berlin. Between 1883 and 1885, he worked in ...
Following Planck, other German physicists quickly became interested in relativity, including Arnold Sommerfeld, Wilhelm Wien, Max Born, Paul Ehrenfest, and Alfred Bucherer. [78] von Laue, who learned about the theory from Planck, [78] published the first definitive monograph on relativity in 1911. [79]
Jan 13, 2016 · Wilhelm Wien. On this date in 1864, Nobel laureate Wilhelm Wien was born in Gaffken near Fischhausen, Province of Prussia (now Primorsk, Russia). The primary area Wien worked in was the radiation of heat. In 1896 he empirically calculated an early law for black body radiation. That work led his colleague at the University of Göttingen, Max ...
The Royal Academy of Sciences has awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics, for the year 1911, to Wilhelm Wien, Professor at the University of Würzburg, for his discoveries concerning the laws of heat radiation. Ever since the beginning of the last century and, in particular, since spectrum analysis reached an advanced stage of development as a ...
Wien’s law, relationship between the temperature of a blackbody (an ideal substance that emits and absorbs all frequencies of light) and the wavelength at which it emits the most light. It is named after German physicist Wilhelm Wien , who received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1911 for discovering the law.