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  1. Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer was born in Munich on the 31st of January 1929, the son of Ludwig Mössbauer and his wife Erna, née Ernst. He was educated at the “Oberschule” (non-classical secondary school) in Munich-Pasing and left after matriculating in I948. After working for one year in industrial laboratories, he started reading physics at ...

  2. Rudolf Mossbauer was born on January 31, 1929, in Munich to Ludwig and Ernest Mossbauer. He was the only child of the couple. His father was a phototechnician, who printed colour post cards and reproduced photographic materials. Young Mossbauer completed his early education from Oberschule in Munich-Pasing.

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  4. Mar 28, 2024 · Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer (born January 31, 1929, Munich, Germany—died September 14, 2011, Grünwald) was a German physicist and winner, with Robert Hofstadter of the United States, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1961 for his discovery of the Mössbauer effect. Mössbauer discovered the effect in 1957, one year before he received his ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Sep 14, 2011 · Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1961. Born: 31 January 1929, Munich, Germany. Died: 14 September 2011. Affiliation at the time of the award: Technical University, Munich, Germany; California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, CA, USA. Prize motivation: “for his researches concerning the resonance absorption of ...

    • Rudolf Mössbauer – Early Life
    • Nuclear Resonance Flourescence
    • Absorption and Recoil
    • The Mössbauer Effect
    • Later Life

    Rudolf Mössbauer was born in Munich, the only son of Ludwig Mössbauer, a phototechnician who printed color post cards and reproduced photographic materials, and his wife Erna. He was educated at the Oberschule in Munich-Pasing and left after matriculating in 1948. His plans to attend a university were thwarted because, due to Germany’s loss in the ...

    Nuclear resonance fluorescenceis is comparable to widely-known phenomena such as, for example, the resonance in tuning forks. When one tuning fork is struck, it begins to vibrate with a certain frequency. When a second tuning fork is struck close to the first, it begins vibrating with the same frequency, and is said to be “resonating” with the firs...

    From the year 1953 onwards his main work was directed towards the study of absorption of gamma rays in matter, in particular the study of nuclear resonance absorption. In his PhD work, Mössbauer discovered recoilless nuclear fluorescence of gamma raysin 191 iridium, a radioactive isotope of a platinum-like metal, from then on known as the Mössbauer...

    The initial reactions to the Mössbauer papers on gamma ray emission ranged from disinterest to doubt. According to one widely-repeated story, two physicists at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory made a five-cent bet on whether or not the Mössbauer Effect really existed. When one scientist was in fact able to demonstrate the effect, the scientific...

    On the suggestion of Richard Feynman , Mössbauer was invited in 1960 to Caltech, where he advanced rapidly from Research Fellow to Senior Research Fellow. He was appointed a full professor of physics in early 1962. In 1964, his alma mater, the Technical University of Munich (TUM), convinced him to go back as a full professor. He retained this posit...

  6. Jun 8, 2018 · Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer was born on January 31, 1929, in Münich, Germany. He was the only son of Ludwig and Erna (Ernst) Mössbauer. Ludwig Mössbauer was a phototechnician who printed color post cards and reproduced photographic materials. Mössbauer grew up during a difficult time in Germany, during the disruptions accompanying the rise of ...

  7. Oct 19, 2011 · Nature 478 , 325 ( 2011) Cite this article. A physicist who revitalized German science by creating a new type of spectroscopy. When Rudolf Mössbauer found in 1957 that γ-rays emitted by iridium ...

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