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Home > Rudolf Mössbauer


Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer (born January 31, 1929) is a German physicist who studied gamma rays from nuclear transitions.

Mössbauer was born in Munich. He won, along with Robert Hofstadter of the United States, the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1961 for his 1957 discovery of the Mössbauer effect — research which he carried out as a PhD student at the Munich University of Technology (TUM).

Surely having one of the steepest career paths within physics (not many Nobel prizes are awarded for PhD theses, after all), he became a professorA professor is a senior teacher and researcher, usually in a college or university. Overview Professors give lectures and seminars in their field of study, such as science or literature. They also do advanced research in their fields and are supposed to d at CalTech in 1961. Only three years later, his alma mater, the physics department of the TUM, could convince him to come back as full professor, where he still is professor emeritus (retired full professor, retaining certain rights).

Combining an umlautThe term umlaut is used for two closely related notions: a special kind of vowel modification and a particular diacritic mark. Vowel modification In linguistics, the process of umlaut (from German um "around", "transformation" + laut "sound") is a modific and an eszett in his name, his name (and the effect named for him) has a notorious amount of spelling variations in English texts: Mößbauer is correct, Moessbauer the correct German umlaut-free style, Mossbauer wrong but common and Mosbauer also seen.

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