Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen: The Birth of Radiology (Springer Biographies)
de
Detalles del producto
- Tapa dura: 203 páginas
- Editor: Springer International Publishing AG; Edición: 2019 (4 de abril de 2019)
- Colección: Springer Biographies
- Idioma: Inglés
Signup for our newsletter to get notified about sales and new products. Add any text here or remove it.
10
14
140
60
100
10
10
20
100
40
30
10
24
60
10
10
12
54
32
30
72
170
16
40
60
30
12
40
24
40
280
10
80
300
24
36
92
8
14
20
10
50
120
40
140
250
40
6
16
14
16
180
46
190
26
36
68
14
14
10 $
de Gerd Rosenbusch (Autor), Annemarie de Knecht-van Eekelen (Autor)
This book, which will appeal to all with an interest in the history of radiology and physics, casts new light on the life and career of Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, showing how his personality was shaped by his youth in the Netherlands and his teachers in Switzerland. Beyond this, it explores the technical developments relevant to the birth of radiology in the late nineteenth century and examines the impact of the discovery of X-rays on a broad range of scientific research. Roentgen (1845-1923) was born in Lennep, Germany, but emigrated with his family to the Netherlands in 1848. As a 17-year-old he moved to Utrecht, entering the Technical School and living at the home of Dr. Jan Willem Gunning. In this well-educated family he was stimulated to continue his studies at university. In 1868 he received a diploma from the Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich and just a year later completed a PhD in physics. He followed his mentor, August Kundt, to the universities of Wurzburg (1870) and Strasburg (1872) and married Anna Ludwig in 1872. In 1879 Roentgen gained his first professorship at a German University, in Giessen, followed by a chair in Wurzburg in 1888. Here he discovered X-rays in 1895, for which he received the first Nobel Prize in physics in 1901. From 1900 until his retirement in 1921 he occupied the chair of physics at the Munich University.