Max Born

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Max Born, Nobel Prize winning German physicist

Max Born (1882-1970) was a Nobel Prize winning German Jewish physicist who helped discover quantum mechanics in the 1920s[1]. Born was one of two children to parents Professor Gustav Born (anatomist and embryologist) and his wife Margarete (daughter of industrialists). Born was first educated at the König Wilhelm Gymnasium, then at the University of Breslau, then Heidelberg University and then the University of Zurich.

Teaching appointments

His first professorial appointment came at the University of Frankfurt-on-Main. He then taught theoretical physics at the University of Göttingen during 1921 – 1933. When the Nazi racial laws started taking effect in Germany in 1933 he fled to Britain where he taught principally at the University of Edinburgh from 1936 – 1953. During 1953 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics[2].

Achievements

In 1921 he was able to give a very precise definition of the quantity of heat and the most satisfactory mathematical statement of the law of thermodynamics. His most famous achievement came in 1926 when he collaborated with one of his students, Werner Heisenberg to develop a mathematical formulation that would describe Heisenberg’s first laws of the new quantum theory (matrix mechanics).

Born died January 5, 1970 in Göttingen, Germany.