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Arthur R. von Hippel

German physicist (1898–2003)


Summary

German physicist (1898–2003)

FieldValue
nameArthur R. von Hippel
imageArthur von Hippel Tech Review cropped.png
captionHippel in 1959 at MIT
birth_date
birth_placeRostock, Germany
death_date
death_placeBoston, Massachusetts, U.S.
citizenshipAmerican
fieldPhysics
work_institutionNiels Bohr Institute, MIT
alma_materUniversity of Göttingen
doctoral_advisorJames Franck
doctoral_studentsJay Last
known_forCodeveloping radar during World War II
Discovering the ferroelectric and piezoelectric properties of barium titanate
thesis_titleThermo-Mikrophone
thesis_urlhttp://www.worldcat.org/oclc/72887959
thesis_year1924
prizesPresident's Certificate of Merit
footnotesHis uncle, Eugen von Hippel described the ophthalmic hemangiomata that are part of von Hippel–Lindau disease, which bears his name.
His son, Eric von Hippel, is an MIT economist.

Discovering the ferroelectric and piezoelectric properties of barium titanate His son, Eric von Hippel, is an MIT economist.

Arthur Robert von Hippel (November 19, 1898 – December 31, 2003) was a German American materials scientist and physicist. Von Hippel was a pioneer in the study of dielectrics, ferromagnetic and ferroelectric materials, and semiconductors and was a codeveloper of radar during World War II.

Early life

Von Hippel was born in Rostock, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, on November 19, 1898, and was the son of Robert von Hippel. He graduated in physics from the University of Göttingen, where David Hilbert, Richard Courant, Robert Pohl, and the Nobel Prize winners Peter Debye, Max Born, and Gustav Hertz were among his teachers in mathematics and physics. He received his Ph.D. in physics in 1924 under the Nobel Prize winner James Franck who in 1930 became his father-in-law by marriage with Franck's daughter Dagmar.

Career and achievements

In 1933, with the ascension of Nazis to power in Germany, von Hippel decided to move to another country, mainly because his wife was Jewish, but due also to his political stance against the new regime. In 1934 he was able to secure a position with the university at Istanbul, Turkey, then spent a year in Denmark, working at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen. In 1936, accepting an invitation by Karl Compton, von Hippel moved again, this time to the United States, and became an assistant professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. During this time, he studied the properties and behavior of high voltage gas discharges, using positive and negative Lichtenberg figures recorded on photographic film. In 1940 he founded the Laboratory for Insulation Research, which soon became one of the most important research and education centers in this area in the world.

Together with the MIT Radiation Laboratory, von Hippel and his collaborators helped to develop radar technology during the war. He was awarded the President's Certificate of Merit in 1948 by U.S. President Harry Truman. He became famous also for his discovery of ferroelectric and piezoelectric properties of barium titanate (BaTiO3).

During the war the results on dielectrics obtained by the Laboratory for Insulation Research were classified information. After the war these results were prepared for publication. In 1954 von Hippel published Dielectrics and Waves and assembled Dielectric Materials and Applications with 22 collaborators. The Laboratory for Insulation Research also published several technical reports.The following citations are from Google Books:

Arthur introduced his ideas of designing materials with properties prescribed for the purpose at hand, or molecular engineering, in 1956 in an article that discussed impurities and dislocations in materials, and the use of imperfections. He edited the volume Molecular Science and Molecular Engineering (1959).

The premier award of the Materials Research Society is named in his honor.

Later life

He died at 105 years of age, in 2003. His son, Frank N. von Hippel is a theoretical physicist and professor of Public Policy at Princeton University. Another son, Eric von Hippel, is a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management who has done pioneering research on user innovation. His uncle, Eugen von Hippel, described the ophthalmic hemangiomata that are part of Von Hippel–Lindau disease, which bears his name.

In historical fiction

Von Hippel is briefly mentioned in Ayşe Kulin's historical novel Without a Country as one of the German scientists who took an academic position in Turkey while fleeing Nazi Germany.

References

References

  1. Rose, Derek. (January 4, 2004). "Arthur R. von Hippel". The Tech.
  2. Dresselhaus, Mildred S.. (September 2004). "Obituary: Arthur Robert von Hippel". Physics Today.
  3. S.O. Morgan (1955) Reviews on Dielectrics, ''[[Journal of the Electrochemical Society]]'' 102(3)
  4. A. von Hippel (1956) [https://www.jstor.org/stable/1750067 Molecular Engineering] {{Webarchive. link. (2018-10-01 , ''[[Science (journal)). Science]]'' 123 & ''[[MIT Technology Review]]'' (March 1956), link from [[Jstor]]
  5. [[C.E.H. Bawn]] (1962) "Review: ''Molecular Science and Molecular Engineering'', ''[[Tetrahedron (journal). Tetrahedron]]'' 18(3):385 "coherent, clear, interesting"
  6. G.A. Gilbert (10 December 1959) [https://books.google.com/books?id=O82SmjKHZxsC&pg=PA1205 Solid State Physics and Chemistry], ''[[New Scientist]]'', link from Google Books
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