Alfred Kleiner
Alfred Kleiner | |
---|---|
statistical physics | |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physicist |
Institutions | University of Zurich |
Thesis | Zur Theorie der intermittirenden Netzhautreizung (1874) |
Doctoral advisor | Johann Jakob Müller |
Doctoral students | Albert Einstein |
Other notable students | Fritz Laager Theodor Erismann |
Alfred Kleiner (24 April 1849 – 3 July 1916) was a Swiss physicist and Professor of
Education
He received his PhD in 1874 from the University of Zurich, for a thesis entitled Zur Theorie der intermittirenden Netzhautreizung (on the theory of diffusion of light), under Johann Jakob Müller.
Career
Alfred Kleiner was professor of physics at the University of Zurich. He also held several other positions and titles throughout his career, including:
In the early 1890s, with his students Fritz Laager and Theordor Erismann, Kleiner conducted experiments to determine if changes in gravitational attraction could be caused by shielding. No effect greater than the experimental error was observed. Kleiner published his results on this in 1905, Laager in 1904, and Erismann in 1908 and 1911. Their work on this was motivated by the papers by Louis Winslow Austin and Charles Burton Thwing.[citation needed]
Einstein and Kleiner
Einstein's controversy with
Until 1909 the ETH was not authorized to grant doctoral degrees, so a special arrangement enabled ETH students to obtain doctorates from the University of Zurich. At that time, most dissertations in physics by ETH students were carried out under the supervision of H.F. Weber, Einstein's former teacher at the Polytechnikum, as it was then called. The University of Zurich had only one physics chair, held by Alfred Kleiner. His main research was focused on measuring instruments, but he also had an interest in the foundations of physics.
In letters to
spent the whole afternoon with Kleiner in Zurich and explained my ideas on the electrodynamics of moving bodies to him. ...He advised me to publish my ideas about the electromagnetic theory of light for moving bodies together with the experimental method. He found the experimental method proposed by me to be the simplest and most appropriate one conceivable. ... I shall most certainly write the paper in the coming weeks.[1]
Einstein also showed Kleiner his first PhD thesis dissertation in November 1901. However, Einstein withdrew his dissertation in February 1902. One year later he considered giving up his plan to obtain a doctorate and noted to his friend Michele Besso that "the whole comedy has become tiresome for me."
By March 1903 Einstein had changed his mind. Indeed, a letter to Besso contains some of the central ideas of the 1905 dissertation. Kleiner was, of course, one of the two faculty reviewers of the dissertation, submitted by Einstein to the University on 20 July 1905. Kleiner's judgement of the dissertation was very positive: "the arguments and calculations to be carried out are among the most difficult in hydrodynamics." The other reviewer, Heinrich Burkhardt, Professor for Mathematics at the university, added: "the mode of treatment demonstrates fundamental mastery of the relevant mathematical methods."[2]
In his biography of Einstein, Carl Seelig reports: "Einstein later laughingly recounted that his dissertation was first returned by Kleiner with the comment that it was too short. After he had added a single sentence, it was accepted without further comment."
Einstein's earlier
In 1905 Einstein obtained his doctorate from the University of Zurich under Alfred Kleiner, with the thesis entitled Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen (A New Determination of the Molecular Dimensions). After Einstein concluded a 1909 lecture at the University of Zurich on electrodynamics and relativity, Alfred Kleiner suggested the possibility of a position at the university to Einstein and recommended him for a newly created professorship in theoretical physics. On 7 May 1909 the Regierungsrat des Kantons Zürich appointed Einstein as an associate professor, effective from 15 October 1909, with a salary of 4,500 Swiss Francs per annum.
Notes
- ^ Vol. 1, p. 328, translation from Stachel, Physics Today, May 1987, p. 47.
- ^ Expert Opinion by Alfred Kleiner and Heinrich Burkhardt on Einstein's Dissertation [Zurich, 22-23 July 1905], collected in Volume 5: The Swiss Years: Correspondence, 1902-1914 (English translation supplement) Page 22.
- .