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Walther Nernst

Walther Hermann Nernst ForMemRS (German pronunciation: [ˈvaltɐ ˈnɛʁnst] (listen); 25 June 1864 – 18 November 1941) was a German chemist known for his work in thermodynamics, physical chemistry, electrochemistry, and solid state physics. His formulation of the Nernst heat theorem helped pave the way for the third law of thermodynamics, for which he won the 1920 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is also known for developing the Nernst equation in 1887.

Walther Nernst

Born(1864-06-25)25 June 1864
Briesen, Prussia
(now Wąbrzeźno, Poland)
Died18 November 1941(1941-11-18) (aged 77)
NationalityGerman
Alma materUniversity of Zürich
Friedrich Wilhelm University
University of Graz
Julius Maximilian University of Würzburg
Known forThird Law of Thermodynamics
Nernst lamp
Nernst equation
Nernst effect
Nernst heat theorem
Nernst potential
Nernst–Planck equation
Nernst's distribution law
SpouseEmma Lohmeyer[2]
AwardsPour le Mérite (1917)
Nobel Prize in chemistry (1920)
Franklin Medal (1928)
ForMemRS (1932)
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry
InstitutionsGeorg August University of Göttingen
Friedrich Wilhelm University
Leipzig University
Doctoral advisorFriedrich Kohlrausch[citation needed]
Other academic advisorsLudwig Boltzmann
Doctoral studentsSir Francis Simon
Richard Abegg
Irving Langmuir
Leonid Andrussow
Karl Friedrich Bonhoeffer
Frederick Lindemann
William Duane
Margaret Eliza Maltby
Arnold Eucken
Other notable studentsGilbert N. Lewis
Max Bodenstein
Robert von Lieben
Kurt Mendelssohn
Theodor Wulf
Emil Bose
Hermann Irving Schlesinger
Claude Hudson
InfluencedJ. R. Partington
Signature
The New Heat Theorem (1926)

Life and career

Early years

Nernst was born in Briesen in West Prussia (now Wąbrzeźno, Poland) to Gustav Nernst (1827–1888) and Ottilie Nerger (1833–1876).[3][4] His father was a country judge. Nernst had three older sisters and one younger brother. His third sister died of cholera. Nernst went to elementary school at Graudenz. He studied physics and mathematics at the universities of Zürich, Berlin, Graz and Würzburg, where he received his doctorate 1887.[5] In 1889, he finished his habilitation at University of Leipzig.

Personal attributes

It was said that Nernst was mechanically minded in that he was always thinking of ways to apply new discoveries to industry. His hobbies included hunting and fishing.[6] His friend Albert Einstein was amused by "his childlike vanity and self-complacency"[7] "His own study and laboratory always presented aspects of extreme chaos which his coworkers termed appropriately 'the state of maximum entropy'".[8]

Family history

Nernst married Emma Lohmeyer in 1892 with whom he had two sons and three daughters. Both of Nernst's sons died fighting in World War I. With his colleagues at the University of Leipzig, Jacobus Henricus van’t Hoff and Svante Arrhenius, was establishing the foundations of a new theoretical and experimental field of inquiry within chemistry and suggested setting fire to unused coal seams to increase the global temperature.[9] He was a vocal critic of Adolf Hitler and Nazism, and two of his three daughters married Jewish men. After Hitler came to power they emigrated, one to England and the other to Brazil.

Career

 
Walther Nernst in 1889.

Nernst started university at Zurich in 1883, then after an interlude in Berlin, he returned to Zurich.[10] He wrote his thesis at Graz where Boltzmann was professor, though he worked under the direction of Ettinghausen. They discovered the Nernst effect: that a magnetic field applied perpendicular to a metallic conductor in a temperature gradient gives rise to an electrical potential difference. Next, he moved to Würzburg under Kohlrausch where he submitted and defended his thesis. Ostwald recruited him to the first department of physical chemistry at Leipzig. Nernst moved there as an assistant, working on the thermodynamics of electrical currents in solutions. Promoted to lecturer, he taught briefly at Heidelberg and then moved to Göttingen. Three years later, he was offered a professorship in Munich, to keep him in Prussia the government created a chair for him at Göttingen. There, he wrote a celebrated textbook Theoretical Chemistry, which was translated into English, French, and Russian. He also derived the Nernst equation for the electrical potential generated by unequal concentrations of an ion separated by a membrane that is permeable to the ion. His equation is widely used in cell physiology and neurobiology.

The carbon electric filament lamp then in use was dim and expensive because it required a vacuum in its bulb. Nernst invented a solid-body radiator with a filament of rare-earth oxides, known as the Nernst glower, it is still important in the field of infrared spectroscopy. Continuous ohmic heating of the filament results in conduction. The glower operates best in wavelengths from 2 to 14 micrometers. It gives a bright light but only after a warm-up period. Nernst sold the patent for one million marks, wisely not opting for royalties because soon the tungsten filament lamp filled with inert gas was introduced. With his riches, Nernst in 1898 bought the first of the eighteen automobiles he owned during his lifetime and a country estate of more than five hundred hectares for hunting. He increased the power of his early automobiles by carrying a cylinder of nitrous oxide that he could inject into the carburetor.[11] After eighteen productive years at Göttingen, investigating osmotic pressure and electrochemistry and presenting a theory of how nerves conduct, he moved to Berlin, and was awarded the title Geheimrat

 
Nernst 1912, portrait by Max Liebermann

In 1905, he proposed his "New Heat Theorem", later known as the Third law of thermodynamics. He showed that as the temperature approached absolute zero, the entropy approaches zero — while the free energy remains above zero. This is the work for which he is best remembered, as it enabled chemists to determine free energies (and therefore equilibrium points) of chemical reactions from heat measurements. Theodore Richards claimed that Nernst had stolen his idea, but Nernst is almost universally credited with the discovery.[12] Nernst became friendly with Kaiser Wilhelm, whom he persuaded to found the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft for the Advancement of the Sciences with an initial capital of eleven million marks. Nernst's laboratory discovered that at low temperatures specific heats fell markedly and would probably disappear at absolute zero. This fall was predicted for liquids and solids in a 1909 paper of Albert Einstein's on the quantum mechanics of specific heats at cryogenic temperatures. Nernst was so impressed that he traveled all the way to Zurich to visit Einstein, who was relatively unknown in Zurich in 1909, so people said: "Einstein must be a clever fellow if the great Nernst comes all the way from Berlin to Zurich to talk to him."[13] Nernst and Planck lobbied to establish a special professorship in Berlin and Nernst donated to its endowment. In 1913 they traveled to Switzerland to persuade Einstein to accept it; a dream job: a named professorship at the top university in Germany, without teaching duties, leaving him free for research.[14]

In 1911, Nernst and Max Planck organized the first Solvay Conference in Brussels. In the following year, the impressionist painter Max Liebermann painted his portrait.

In 1914, the Nernsts were entertaining co-workers and students they had brought to their country estate in a private railway car when they learned that war had been declared. Their two older sons entered the army, while father enlisted in the voluntary driver's corps. He supported the German army against their opponent's charges of barbarism by signing the Manifesto of the Ninety-Three, On 21 August 1914, he drove documents from Berlin to the commander of the German right wing in France, advancing with them for two weeks until he could see the glow of the Paris lights at night. The tide turned at the battle of the Marne. When the stalemate in the trenches began, he returned home. He contacted Colonel Max Bauer, the staff officer responsible for munitions, with the idea of driving the defenders out of their trenches with shells releasing tear gas.[15] When his idea was tried one of the observers was Fritz Haber, who argued that too many shells would be needed, it would be better to release a cloud of heavier-than-air poisonous gas; the first chlorine cloud attack on 22 April 1915 was not supported by a strong infantry thrust, so the chance that gas would break the stalemate was irrevocably gone. Nernst was awarded the Iron Cross second class. As a Staff Scientific Advisor in the Imperial German Army, he directed research on explosives, much of which was done in his laboratory where they developed guanidine perchlorate. Then he worked on the development of trench mortars. He was awarded the Iron Cross first class and later the Pour le Mérite. When the high command was considering unleashing unrestricted submarine warfare, he asked the Kaiser for an opportunity to warn about the enormous potential of the United States as an adversary. They would not listen, Ludendorff shouted him down for "incompetent nonsense."[16] He published his book The Foundations of the New Heat Theorem. Both sons had died at the front.

In 1918, after studying photochemistry, he proposed the atomic chain reaction theory. It stated that when a reaction in which free atoms are formed that can decompose target molecules into more free atoms would result in a chain reaction. His theory is closely related to the natural process of Nuclear Fission.

In 1920, he and his family briefly fled abroad because he was one of the scientists on the Allied list of war criminals. Later that year he received the Nobel Prize in chemistry in recognition of his work on thermochemistry. He was elected Rector of Berlin University for 1921–1922. He set up an agency to channel government and private funds to young scientists and declined becoming Ambassador to the United States. For two unhappy years, he was the president of the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt (National Physical Laboratory), where he could not cope with the "mixture of mediocrity and red tape".[17] In 1924, he became director of the Institute of Physical Chemistry at Berlin.

In 1927, the decrease in specific heat at low temperatures was extended to gases. He studied the theories of cosmic rays and cosmology.

Although a press release described him as "completely unmusical",[18] Nernst developed an electric piano, the "Neo-Bechstein-Flügel" in 1930 in association with the Bechstein and Siemens companies, replacing the sounding board with vacuum tube amplifiers. The piano used electromagnetic pickups to produce electronically modified and amplified sound in the same way as an electric guitar. In fact, he was a pianist, sometimes accompanying Einstein's violin.[circular reference]

In 1933, Nernst learned that a colleague, with whom he had hoped to collaborate, had been dismissed from the department because he was a Jew. Nernst immediately taxied to see Haber to request a position in his Institute, which was not controlled by the government, only to learn that Haber was moving to England. Soon, Nernst was in trouble for declining to fill out a government form on his racial origins. He retired from his professorship but was sacked from the board of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute. He lived quietly in the country; in 1937 he traveled to Oxford to receive an honorary degree, also visiting his eldest daughter, her husband, and his three grandchildren. Nernst had a severe heart attack in 1939. He died in 1941 at Gau, Lower Silesia, East Prussia (now Niwica, Poland) and was buried three times.[19] He was buried for the first time near the place of his death. However, his remains were moved to Berlin, where he was buried a second time. Finally they were moved again and buried near Max Planck, Otto Hahn and Max von Laue in Göttingen, Germany.[6]

Honours

In 1923, botanist Ignatz Urban published Nernstia, which is a genus of flowering plants from Mexico, in the family Rubiaceae and named in his honour.[20]

Publications

  • Walther Nernst, "Reasoning of theoretical chemistry: Nine papers (1889–1921)" (Ger., Begründung der Theoretischen Chemie : Neun Abhandlungen, 1889–1921). Frankfurt am Main : Verlag Harri Deutsch, c. 2003. ISBN 3-8171-3290-5
  • Walther Nernst, "The theoretical and experimental bases of the New Heat Theorem" (Ger., Die theoretischen und experimentellen Grundlagen des neuen Wärmesatzes). Halle [Ger.] W. Knapp, 1918 [tr. 1926]. [ed., this is a list of thermodynamical papers from the physico-chemical institute of the University of Berlin (1906–1916); Translation available by Guy Barr LCCN 27-2575
  • Walther Nernst, "Theoretical chemistry from the standpoint of Avogadro's law and thermodynamics" (Ger., Theoretische Chemie vom Standpunkte der Avogadroschen Regel und der Thermodynamik). Stuttgart, F. Enke, 1893 [5th edition, 1923]. LCCN po28-417

See also

References

  1. ^ Cherwell; Simon, F. (1942). "Walther Nernst. 1864-1941". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 4 (11): 101. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1942.0010. S2CID 123003922.
  2. ^ https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/chemistry/1920/nernst/biographical/[bare URL]
  3. ^ Barkan, Diana (1999). Walther Nernst and the transition to modern physical science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-44456-9.
  4. ^ Bartel, Hans-Georg, (1999) "Nernst, Walther", pp. 66–68 in Neue Deutsche Biographie, Vol. 19
  5. ^ Mendelssohn, K. (1973). The World of Walther Nernst. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-8229-1109-8.
  6. ^ a b Walther Nernst on Nobelprize.org  
  7. ^ "W. Nernst (A. Einstein, 1942)". www.nernst.de.
  8. ^ Mendelssohn 1973, p. 70.
  9. ^ Physical Chemistry 2016,13th International Conference on Fundamental and Applied Aspects of Physical Chemistry (PDF). Vol. II. The Society of Physical Chemists of Serbia. 2016. p. 880. ISBN 978-86-82475-33-0.
  10. ^ "Walther Nernst Memorial". www.nernst.de.
  11. ^ Cherwell, F. Simon (1942). "Walther Nernst, 1864–1941". Obit. Not. Fell. R. Soc. Lond. 4 (11): 1022.
  12. ^ Coffey, Patrick (2008). Cathedrals of Science: The Personalities and Rivalries That Made Modern Chemistry. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 78–81. ISBN 978-0-19-532134-0.
  13. ^ Stone, A. Douglas (2013). Einstein and the quantum : the quest of the valiant Swabian. Princeton University Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780691139685.
  14. ^ Stone 2013, p. 165.
  15. ^ Van der Kloot, W. (2004). "April 1918: Five Future Nobel prize-winners inaugurate weapons of mass destruction and the academic-industrial-military complex". Notes Rec. R. Soc. Lond. 58 (2): 149–160. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2004.0053. S2CID 145243958.
  16. ^ Mendelssohn 1973, p. 92
  17. ^ Mendelssohn 1973, p. 138.
  18. ^ Mendelssohn 1973, p. 139.
  19. ^ Laidler, Keith J. (1993). To Light such a Candle. Oxford University Press. p. 56--59.
  20. ^ "Nernstia mexicana (Zucc. & Mart. ex DC.) Urb". The Plant List. Retrieved 25 March 2016.

Cited sources

  • Stone, A. Douglas (2013) Einstein and the Quantum. Princeton University Press. ISBN 1-4915-3104-5

Further reading

  • Barkan, Diana Kormos (1998). Walther Nernst and the Transition to Modern Physical Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-44456-9.
  • Bartel, Hans-Georg; Huebener, Rudolf P. (2007). Walther Nernst. Pioneer of Physics and of Chemistry. Singapore: World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-256-560-0.
  • Mendelssohn, Kurt Alfred Georg (1973). The World of Walther Nernst: The Rise and Fall of German Science. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-14895-2.

External links

  • Katz, Eugenii. "Hermann Walther Nernst". Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  • "Nernst: architect of physical revolution". Physics World. September 1999. – Review of Diana Barkan's Walther Nernst and the Transition to Modern Physical Science
  • "Hermann Walther Nernst, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1920 : Prize Presentation". Presentation Speech by Professor Gerard De Geer, President of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
  • Schmitt, Ulrich, "Walther Nernst". Physicochemical institute, Göttingen
  • "Walther Nernst" (PDF). nobelmirror.
  • Walther Nernst at the Mathematics Genealogy Project  
  • Newspaper clippings about Walther Nernst in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW  
  • Cassius Klay Nascimento, João Pedro Braga. "Walther Nernst Lecture in Brazil" (PDF).
  • Walther Nernst on Nobelprize.org   including the Nobel Lecture, 12 December 1921 Studies in Chemical Thermodynamics

walther, nernst, walther, hermann, nernst, formemrs, german, pronunciation, ˈvaltɐ, ˈnɛʁnst, listen, june, 1864, november, 1941, german, chemist, known, work, thermodynamics, physical, chemistry, electrochemistry, solid, state, physics, formulation, nernst, he. Walther Hermann Nernst ForMemRS German pronunciation ˈvaltɐ ˈnɛʁnst listen 25 June 1864 18 November 1941 was a German chemist known for his work in thermodynamics physical chemistry electrochemistry and solid state physics His formulation of the Nernst heat theorem helped pave the way for the third law of thermodynamics for which he won the 1920 Nobel Prize in Chemistry He is also known for developing the Nernst equation in 1887 Walther NernstFRS 1 Born 1864 06 25 25 June 1864Briesen Prussia now Wabrzezno Poland Died18 November 1941 1941 11 18 aged 77 Zibelle Gau Lower Silesia Nazi Germany now Niwica Poland NationalityGermanAlma materUniversity of ZurichFriedrich Wilhelm UniversityUniversity of GrazJulius Maximilian University of WurzburgKnown forThird Law of ThermodynamicsNernst lampNernst equationNernst effectNernst heat theoremNernst potentialNernst Planck equationNernst s distribution lawSpouseEmma Lohmeyer 2 AwardsPour le Merite 1917 Nobel Prize in chemistry 1920 Franklin Medal 1928 ForMemRS 1932 Scientific careerFieldsChemistryInstitutionsGeorg August University of GottingenFriedrich Wilhelm UniversityLeipzig UniversityDoctoral advisorFriedrich Kohlrausch citation needed Other academic advisorsLudwig BoltzmannDoctoral studentsSir Francis Simon Richard Abegg Irving Langmuir Leonid Andrussow Karl Friedrich BonhoefferFrederick LindemannWilliam DuaneMargaret Eliza Maltby Arnold EuckenOther notable studentsGilbert N LewisMax BodensteinRobert von LiebenKurt MendelssohnTheodor WulfEmil BoseHermann Irving SchlesingerClaude HudsonInfluencedJ R PartingtonSignatureThe New Heat Theorem 1926 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 Personal attributes 1 3 Family history 1 4 Career 2 Honours 3 Publications 4 See also 5 References 6 Cited sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife and career EditEarly years Edit Nernst was born in Briesen in West Prussia now Wabrzezno Poland to Gustav Nernst 1827 1888 and Ottilie Nerger 1833 1876 3 4 His father was a country judge Nernst had three older sisters and one younger brother His third sister died of cholera Nernst went to elementary school at Graudenz He studied physics and mathematics at the universities of Zurich Berlin Graz and Wurzburg where he received his doctorate 1887 5 In 1889 he finished his habilitation at University of Leipzig Personal attributes Edit It was said that Nernst was mechanically minded in that he was always thinking of ways to apply new discoveries to industry His hobbies included hunting and fishing 6 His friend Albert Einstein was amused by his childlike vanity and self complacency 7 His own study and laboratory always presented aspects of extreme chaos which his coworkers termed appropriately the state of maximum entropy 8 Family history Edit Nernst married Emma Lohmeyer in 1892 with whom he had two sons and three daughters Both of Nernst s sons died fighting in World War I With his colleagues at the University of Leipzig Jacobus Henricus van t Hoff and Svante Arrhenius was establishing the foundations of a new theoretical and experimental field of inquiry within chemistry and suggested setting fire to unused coal seams to increase the global temperature 9 He was a vocal critic of Adolf Hitler and Nazism and two of his three daughters married Jewish men After Hitler came to power they emigrated one to England and the other to Brazil Career Edit Walther Nernst in 1889 Nernst started university at Zurich in 1883 then after an interlude in Berlin he returned to Zurich 10 He wrote his thesis at Graz where Boltzmann was professor though he worked under the direction of Ettinghausen They discovered the Nernst effect that a magnetic field applied perpendicular to a metallic conductor in a temperature gradient gives rise to an electrical potential difference Next he moved to Wurzburg under Kohlrausch where he submitted and defended his thesis Ostwald recruited him to the first department of physical chemistry at Leipzig Nernst moved there as an assistant working on the thermodynamics of electrical currents in solutions Promoted to lecturer he taught briefly at Heidelberg and then moved to Gottingen Three years later he was offered a professorship in Munich to keep him in Prussia the government created a chair for him at Gottingen There he wrote a celebrated textbook Theoretical Chemistry which was translated into English French and Russian He also derived the Nernst equation for the electrical potential generated by unequal concentrations of an ion separated by a membrane that is permeable to the ion His equation is widely used in cell physiology and neurobiology The carbon electric filament lamp then in use was dim and expensive because it required a vacuum in its bulb Nernst invented a solid body radiator with a filament of rare earth oxides known as the Nernst glower it is still important in the field of infrared spectroscopy Continuous ohmic heating of the filament results in conduction The glower operates best in wavelengths from 2 to 14 micrometers It gives a bright light but only after a warm up period Nernst sold the patent for one million marks wisely not opting for royalties because soon the tungsten filament lamp filled with inert gas was introduced With his riches Nernst in 1898 bought the first of the eighteen automobiles he owned during his lifetime and a country estate of more than five hundred hectares for hunting He increased the power of his early automobiles by carrying a cylinder of nitrous oxide that he could inject into the carburetor 11 After eighteen productive years at Gottingen investigating osmotic pressure and electrochemistry and presenting a theory of how nerves conduct he moved to Berlin and was awarded the title Geheimrat Nernst 1912 portrait by Max Liebermann In 1905 he proposed his New Heat Theorem later known as the Third law of thermodynamics He showed that as the temperature approached absolute zero the entropy approaches zero while the free energy remains above zero This is the work for which he is best remembered as it enabled chemists to determine free energies and therefore equilibrium points of chemical reactions from heat measurements Theodore Richards claimed that Nernst had stolen his idea but Nernst is almost universally credited with the discovery 12 Nernst became friendly with Kaiser Wilhelm whom he persuaded to found the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft for the Advancement of the Sciences with an initial capital of eleven million marks Nernst s laboratory discovered that at low temperatures specific heats fell markedly and would probably disappear at absolute zero This fall was predicted for liquids and solids in a 1909 paper of Albert Einstein s on the quantum mechanics of specific heats at cryogenic temperatures Nernst was so impressed that he traveled all the way to Zurich to visit Einstein who was relatively unknown in Zurich in 1909 so people said Einstein must be a clever fellow if the great Nernst comes all the way from Berlin to Zurich to talk to him 13 Nernst and Planck lobbied to establish a special professorship in Berlin and Nernst donated to its endowment In 1913 they traveled to Switzerland to persuade Einstein to accept it a dream job a named professorship at the top university in Germany without teaching duties leaving him free for research 14 In 1911 Nernst and Max Planck organized the first Solvay Conference in Brussels In the following year the impressionist painter Max Liebermann painted his portrait In 1914 the Nernsts were entertaining co workers and students they had brought to their country estate in a private railway car when they learned that war had been declared Their two older sons entered the army while father enlisted in the voluntary driver s corps He supported the German army against their opponent s charges of barbarism by signing the Manifesto of the Ninety Three On 21 August 1914 he drove documents from Berlin to the commander of the German right wing in France advancing with them for two weeks until he could see the glow of the Paris lights at night The tide turned at the battle of the Marne When the stalemate in the trenches began he returned home He contacted Colonel Max Bauer the staff officer responsible for munitions with the idea of driving the defenders out of their trenches with shells releasing tear gas 15 When his idea was tried one of the observers was Fritz Haber who argued that too many shells would be needed it would be better to release a cloud of heavier than air poisonous gas the first chlorine cloud attack on 22 April 1915 was not supported by a strong infantry thrust so the chance that gas would break the stalemate was irrevocably gone Nernst was awarded the Iron Cross second class As a Staff Scientific Advisor in the Imperial German Army he directed research on explosives much of which was done in his laboratory where they developed guanidine perchlorate Then he worked on the development of trench mortars He was awarded the Iron Cross first class and later the Pour le Merite When the high command was considering unleashing unrestricted submarine warfare he asked the Kaiser for an opportunity to warn about the enormous potential of the United States as an adversary They would not listen Ludendorff shouted him down for incompetent nonsense 16 He published his book The Foundations of the New Heat Theorem Both sons had died at the front In 1918 after studying photochemistry he proposed the atomic chain reaction theory It stated that when a reaction in which free atoms are formed that can decompose target molecules into more free atoms would result in a chain reaction His theory is closely related to the natural process of Nuclear Fission In 1920 he and his family briefly fled abroad because he was one of the scientists on the Allied list of war criminals Later that year he received the Nobel Prize in chemistry in recognition of his work on thermochemistry He was elected Rector of Berlin University for 1921 1922 He set up an agency to channel government and private funds to young scientists and declined becoming Ambassador to the United States For two unhappy years he was the president of the Physikalisch Technische Reichsanstalt National Physical Laboratory where he could not cope with the mixture of mediocrity and red tape 17 In 1924 he became director of the Institute of Physical Chemistry at Berlin In 1927 the decrease in specific heat at low temperatures was extended to gases He studied the theories of cosmic rays and cosmology Although a press release described him as completely unmusical 18 Nernst developed an electric piano the Neo Bechstein Flugel in 1930 in association with the Bechstein and Siemens companies replacing the sounding board with vacuum tube amplifiers The piano used electromagnetic pickups to produce electronically modified and amplified sound in the same way as an electric guitar In fact he was a pianist sometimes accompanying Einstein s violin circular reference In 1933 Nernst learned that a colleague with whom he had hoped to collaborate had been dismissed from the department because he was a Jew Nernst immediately taxied to see Haber to request a position in his Institute which was not controlled by the government only to learn that Haber was moving to England Soon Nernst was in trouble for declining to fill out a government form on his racial origins He retired from his professorship but was sacked from the board of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute He lived quietly in the country in 1937 he traveled to Oxford to receive an honorary degree also visiting his eldest daughter her husband and his three grandchildren Nernst had a severe heart attack in 1939 He died in 1941 at Gau Lower Silesia East Prussia now Niwica Poland and was buried three times 19 He was buried for the first time near the place of his death However his remains were moved to Berlin where he was buried a second time Finally they were moved again and buried near Max Planck Otto Hahn and Max von Laue in Gottingen Germany 6 Honours EditIn 1923 botanist Ignatz Urban published Nernstia which is a genus of flowering plants from Mexico in the family Rubiaceae and named in his honour 20 Publications EditWalther Nernst Reasoning of theoretical chemistry Nine papers 1889 1921 Ger Begrundung der Theoretischen Chemie Neun Abhandlungen 1889 1921 Frankfurt am Main Verlag Harri Deutsch c 2003 ISBN 3 8171 3290 5 Walther Nernst The theoretical and experimental bases of the New Heat Theorem Ger Die theoretischen und experimentellen Grundlagen des neuen Warmesatzes Halle Ger W Knapp 1918 tr 1926 ed this is a list of thermodynamical papers from the physico chemical institute of the University of Berlin 1906 1916 Translation available by Guy Barr LCCN 27 2575 Walther Nernst Theoretical chemistry from the standpoint of Avogadro s law and thermodynamics Ger Theoretische Chemie vom Standpunkte der Avogadroschen Regel und der Thermodynamik Stuttgart F Enke 1893 5th edition 1923 LCCN po28 417See also EditGerman inventors and discoverers C Bechstein Pianofortefabrik Chain reaction Cosmological constant problem Cosmic background radiation History of electrophoresis Nernst Einstein equation Nernst Lewis Latimer convention Solid state ionics Stochastic electrodynamics Threshold potential Tired light Zero point energyReferences Edit Cherwell Simon F 1942 Walther Nernst 1864 1941 Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 4 11 101 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1942 0010 S2CID 123003922 https www nobelprize org prizes chemistry 1920 nernst biographical bare URL Barkan Diana 1999 Walther Nernst and the transition to modern physical science Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 44456 9 Bartel Hans Georg 1999 Nernst Walther pp 66 68 in Neue Deutsche Biographie Vol 19 Mendelssohn K 1973 The World of Walther Nernst University of Pittsburgh Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 8229 1109 8 a b Walther Nernst on Nobelprize org W Nernst A Einstein 1942 www nernst de Mendelssohn 1973 p 70 Physical Chemistry 2016 13th International Conference on Fundamental and Applied Aspects of Physical Chemistry PDF Vol II The Society of Physical Chemists of Serbia 2016 p 880 ISBN 978 86 82475 33 0 Walther Nernst Memorial www nernst de Cherwell F Simon 1942 Walther Nernst 1864 1941 Obit Not Fell R Soc Lond 4 11 1022 Coffey Patrick 2008 Cathedrals of Science The Personalities and Rivalries That Made Modern Chemistry Oxford Oxford University Press pp 78 81 ISBN 978 0 19 532134 0 Stone A Douglas 2013 Einstein and the quantum the quest of the valiant Swabian Princeton University Press p 146 ISBN 9780691139685 Stone 2013 p 165 Van der Kloot W 2004 April 1918 Five Future Nobel prize winners inaugurate weapons of mass destruction and the academic industrial military complex Notes Rec R Soc Lond 58 2 149 160 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2004 0053 S2CID 145243958 Mendelssohn 1973 p 92 Mendelssohn 1973 p 138 Mendelssohn 1973 p 139 Laidler Keith J 1993 To Light such a Candle Oxford University Press p 56 59 Nernstia mexicana Zucc amp Mart ex DC Urb The Plant List Retrieved 25 March 2016 Cited sources EditStone A Douglas 2013 Einstein and the Quantum Princeton University Press ISBN 1 4915 3104 5Further reading EditBarkan Diana Kormos 1998 Walther Nernst and the Transition to Modern Physical Science Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 44456 9 Bartel Hans Georg Huebener Rudolf P 2007 Walther Nernst Pioneer of Physics and of Chemistry Singapore World Scientific ISBN 978 981 256 560 0 Mendelssohn Kurt Alfred Georg 1973 The World of Walther Nernst The Rise and Fall of German Science London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 14895 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Walther Nernst Wikisource has original works by or about Walther Nernst Katz Eugenii Hermann Walther Nernst Retrieved 5 December 2008 Nernst architect of physical revolution Physics World September 1999 Review of Diana Barkan s Walther Nernst and the Transition to Modern Physical Science Hermann Walther Nernst Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1920 Prize Presentation Presentation Speech by Professor Gerard De Geer President of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Schmitt Ulrich Walther Nernst Physicochemical institute Gottingen Walther Nernst PDF nobelmirror Walther Nernst at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Newspaper clippings about Walther Nernst in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Cassius Klay Nascimento Joao Pedro Braga Walther Nernst Lecture in Brazil PDF Walther Nernst on Nobelprize org including the Nobel Lecture 12 December 1921 Studies in Chemical Thermodynamics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walther Nernst amp oldid 1148487804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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