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Werner
Heisenberg was born on 5th December, 1901, at Würzburg. He was the son
of Dr. August Heisenberg and his wife Annie Wecklein. His father later
became Professor of the Middle and Modern Greek languages in the University
of Munich. It was probably due to his influence that Heisenberg remarked,
when the Japanese physicist Yukawa discovered the particle now known as
the meson and the term "mesotron" was proposed for it, that the Greek
word "mesos" has no "tr" in it, with the result that the name "mesotron"
was changed to "meson".
Heisenberg went to the Maximilian school at Munich until 1920, when he
went to the University of Munich to study physics under
Sommerfeld,
Wien,
Pringsheim, and Rosenthal. During the winter of 1922-1923 he went to Gottingen
to study physics under Max Born, Franck, and Hilbert. In 1923 he took
his Ph.D. at the University of Munich and then became Assistant to Max
Born at the University of Gottingen, and in 1924 he gained the venia legendi
at that University.
From 1924 until 1925
he worked, with a Rockefeller Grant, with Niels Bohr, at the University
of Copenhagen, returning for the summer of 1925 to Gottingen.
In 1926 he was appointed Lecturer in Theoretical Physics at the University
of Copenhagen under Niels Bohr and in 1927, when he was only 26, he was
appointed Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Leipzig.
In 1929 he went on
a lecture tour to the United States, Japan, and India.
In 1941 he was appointed
Professor of Physics at the University of Berlin and Director of the Kaiser
Wilhelm Institute for Physics there.
At the end of the
Second World War he, and other German physicists, were taken prisoner
by American troops and sent to England, but in 1946 he returned to Germany
and reorganized, with his colleagues, the Institute for Physics at Gottingen.
This Institute was, in 1948, renamed the Max Planck Institute for Physics.
In 1948 Heisenberg stayed for some months in Cambridge, England, to give
lectures, and in 1950 and 1954 he was invited to lecture in the United
States. In the winter of 1955-1956 he gave the Gifford Lectures at the
University of St. Andrews, Scotland, these lectures being subsequently
published as a book.
During 1955 Heisenberg
was occupied with preparations for the removal of the Max Planck Institute
for Physics to Munich. Still Director of this Institute, he went with
it to Munich and in 1958 he was appointed Professor of Physics in the
University of Munich. His Institute was then being renamed the Max Planck
Institute for Physics and Astrophysics.
Heisenberg's name
will always be associated with his theory of quantum mechanics, published
in 1925, when he was only 23 years old. For this theory and the applications
of it which resulted especially in the discovery of allotropic forms of
hydrogen, Heisenberg was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics for 1932.
His new theory was based only on what can be observed, that is to say,
on the radiation emitted by the atom. We cannot, he said, always assign
to an electron a position in space at a given time, nor follow it in its
orbit, so that we cannot assume that the planetary orbits postulated by
Niels Bohr actually exist. Mechanical quantities, such as position, velocity,
etc. should be represented, not by ordinary numbers, but by abstract mathematical
structures called "matrices" and he formulated his new theory in terms
of matrix equations.
Later Heisenberg
stated his famous principle of uncertainty, which lays it down that the
determination of the position and momentum of a mobile particle necessarily
contains errors the product of which cannot be less than the quantum constant
h and that, although these errors are negligible on the human scale, they
cannot be ignored in studies of the atom.
From 1957 onwards Heisenberg was interested in work on problems of plasma
physics and thermonuclear processes, and also much work in close collaboration
with the International Institute of Atomic Physics at Geneva. He was for
several years Chairman of the Scientific Policy Committee of this Institute
and subsequently remained a member of this Committee.
When he became,
in 1953, President of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, he did much
to further the policy of this Foundation, which was to invite scientists
from other countries to Germany and to help them to work there.
Since 1953 his own
theoretical work was concentrated on the unified field theory of elementary
particles which seems to him to be the key to an understanding of the
physics of elementary particles.
Apart from many medals and prizes, Heisenberg received an honorary doctorate
of the University of Bruxelles, of the Technological University Karlsruhe,
and recently (1964) of the University of Budapest; he is also recipient
of the Order of Merit of Bavaria, and the Grand Cross for Federal Services
with Star (Germany). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of London and
a Knight of the Order of Merit (Peace Class). He is a member of the Academies
of Sciences of G?ttingen, Bavaria, Saxony, Prussia, Sweden, Rumania, Norway,
Spain, The Netherlands, Rome (Pontificial), the German Akademie der Naturforscher
Leopoldina (Halle), the Accademia dei Lincei (Rome), and the American
Academy of Sciences. During 1949-1951 he was President of the Deutsche
Forschungsrat (German Research Council) and in 1953 he became President
of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
One
of his hobbies is classical music: he is a distinguished pianist. In 1937
Heisenberg married Elisabeth Schumacher. They have seven children, and
live in Munich.
Werner Heisenberg
died in 1976.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physics 1922-1941.
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