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Otto Hittmair

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Austrian theoretical physicist (1924–2003)
Otto Hittmair
Born(1924-03-16)16 March 1924
Died5 September 2003(2003-09-05) (aged 79)
Nordkette mountains near Innsbruck
Alma materUniversity of Innsbruck
Known fornuclear reactions
AwardsDecoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria(1980)[1]

Wilhelm Exner Medal(1980)[2]
Erwin Schrödinger Prize(1974)[3]
Joseph Johann Ritter von Prechtl Medal from theVienna University of Technology

Honorary Doctorate from theUniversity of Budapest
Scientific career
Fieldsphysics

Otto Hittmair (1924–2003) was anAustrian theoretical physicist who made contributions toquantum mechanics,superconductivity andunified field theory. From 1987 to 1991 he was President of theAustrian Academy of Sciences.[4]

Life

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Otto Hittmair was born in Innsbruck (Tyrol) on 16 March 1924. He graduated with distinction from theUniversity of Innsbruck in 1942. He worked withErwin Schrödinger at theDublin Institute for Advanced Studies in the late 1940s and together with him, published work on aunified field theory. He worked abroad at theInstitut Henri Poincaré, theUniversity of Sydney, and theMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge where he was a Fulbright scholar.

His specialty was nuclear reactions, especially stripping reactions, in which nucleons are exchanged between the scattering nuclei. In 1958–1960 he worked at the Atomic Institute of the Austrian Universities and in 1960 became Professor of Theoretical Physics and Director of the Institute of Theoretical Physics at the Technical University of Vienna.

He was Dean of the Faculty of Science from 1968 to 1969 and thenRector of the Technical University of Vienna from 1977 to 1979.

Otto Hittmair died on 5 September 2003 in a climbing accident in theNordkette mountain range near Innsbruck. The main-belt asteroid 10782 Hittmair discovered in 1991 is named after him.[5] Otto-Hittmair-Platz in Innsbruck is named in his honor.

Works

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  • 1951Studies in the generalized theory of gravitation (with Erwin Schrödinger), Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies[6]
  • 1957Nuclear Stripping Reactions (with S. T. Buttler and Stuart Thomas), Horwitz Publications
  • 1971Wärmetheorie (with G. Adam), Vieweg+Teubner Verlag,ISBN 3528333111
  • 1972Lehrbuch der Quantentheorie, Verlag Karl Thiemig, January 1, 1972,ISBN 3446147950[7]
  • 1979Supraleitung (mit H. Weber), K. Thiemig,ISBN 3521061132[8]
  • 1987Schrödinger's unified field theory seen 40 years later'' (Editor C. W. Kilmister), Technische Universitӓt Wien
  • 1997Akademie der Wissenschaften : Entwicklung einer österreichischen Forschungsinstitution (with Herbert Hunger), Verlag der Österreichischen, Vienna,ISBN 3700126379

References

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  1. ^Order of Merit of the Austrian Republic
  2. ^Wilhelm Exner Medal winners
  3. ^Prize winners and award winners of the Erwin Schrödinger PrizeArchived 2017-07-02 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^Wilhelm Exner Medal foundation Otto Hittmair
  5. ^JPL Small-Body Database Browser 10782 Hittmair (1991 RH4)
  6. ^DIAS: School of Theoretical Physics: Communications
  7. ^Austria-Forum Hittmair, Otto
  8. ^Katalog der Deutsche National Bibliothek: Otto Hittmair
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