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Maximilian Jacob Herzberger
At the visitors' conference of the Mathematical Society Jena, Oct 1930
Born(1899-03-17)March 17, 1899
Berlin, Germany
DiedApril 9, 1982(1982-04-09) (aged 83)
New Orleans, Louisiana, US
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma mater Berlin University
Known for Superachromat lens
SpouseEdith Kaufmann
ChildrenRuth (1928), Ursula Bellugi (1931), Hans (1932)
AwardsCressy Morrison Award ( NYAS 1945), Frederic Ives Medal ( OSA 1962)
Scientific career
Thesis Ueber Systeme hyperkomplexer Grössen  (1923)
Doctoral advisors Ludwig Bieberbach, Issai Schur

Maximilian Jacob Herzberger (7 or 17 Mar 1899, Berlin, Germany — 9 Apr 1982, New Orleans, United States) [1] [2] was a German-American mathematician and physicist, known for his development of the superachromat lens.

Life

Maximilian Herzberger was the son of Leopold Herzberger (born 7 Mar 1870, Krefeld — died in Rochester (NY)) and Sonja/Sofia Behrendt/Berendt/Berends (22 Mar 1876, Petersburg (Germany)[ clarification needed] — 28 Jan 1945, Florence); he had a sister Olga (24 Sep 1897, Berlin — 2 Aug 1922, Berlin). The family was Jewish. [3] He studied mathematics and physics at the Berlin University, where Albert Einstein was one of his professors, and later became a friend and advisor. [4]: 57r  In 1923, Herzberger finished his Ph.D. thesis Ueber Systeme hyperkomplexer Grössen under Ludwig Bieberbach and Issai Schur at the philosophical faculty. [5] In 1925, he married Edith Kaufmann (10 Oct 1901, Stuttgart — 16 Feb 2001, Carlsbad (California) or New Orleans); they had three children, born in Jena, viz. Ruth (born 1928), Ursula Bellugi (1931), and Hans (6 Aug 1932, spouse of Radhika Herzberger). [1] [2] No later than Sep 1930, he was assistant of Hans Boegehold,( de) the chief of calculation office at Carl Zeiss Jena. [6]

In 1934, the Nazis deprived him from his professorship at Jena University and his contract with Zeiss. Leaving Germany with a "total of $10 in my pockets". [4], he went initially to the Netherlands, where he was hosted by the Dutch physicist A.C.S. van Heel. [7] After the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, he emigrated with his family to Rochester (NY), [6] where he became head of Eastman Kodak's optical research laboratories, arranged by Einstein. [4]: 57r  In 1940, he and his family became U.S. citizens. [4]: 58l  In 1945, he got the Cressy Morrison Award of the New York Academy of Sciences. [4]: 57l 

In 1954 he finished the development of the superachromat as the ultimately well-corrected lens for Kodak. [4]: 58m  [8] In 1962, he was awarded the Frederic Ives Medal of the Optical Society of America. [9] [10] In 1965, he retired from his position at Kodak, and helped building a graduate institute for optics in Switzerland, [4]: 58r  until in 1968 he followed invitation of the University of New Orleans to teach at their Physics Department. [4]: 57m, 58r  [6]

He held patents for an "apochromatic telescope objective having three air spaced components", [11] and a "superachromatic objective". [12]

Publications

  • Ueber Systeme hyperkomplexer Grössen, Max Herzberger, Berlin, 1923, Ebering.
  • Untersuchungen über die Eigenschaften erster Ordnung von reellen Strahlensystemen, Jan 1928, De Gruyter, ISBN  9783111279886
  • Untersuchungen über die Eigenschaften erster Ordnung von reellen Strahlensystemen, in: Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, Vol.159, p. 36-49, 1928
  • Über die geometrische Bedeutung des Rotationswinkels in der Strahlengeometrie, Jan 1928, De Gruyter, ISBN  9783111095615
  • Über die geometrische Bedeutung des Rotationswinkels in der Strahlengeometrie, in: Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, Vol.160, p. 33-37, 1929
  • Gullstrand, Allvar, Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography, 2008
  • M. Herzberger, Allvar Gullstrand, in Optica Acta, Vol.3 (1960), p. 237–241

References

  1. ^ a b Record at geni.com, and related records
  2. ^ a b Person sheet at goudsmit.home.xs4all.nl
  3. ^ Maximilian Jacob Herzberger
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Lorena Dureau, Einstein's Protege, p.56-58, Sep.???? (1970 or after)
  5. ^ Record at Humboldt University Berlin
  6. ^ a b c Catalog entry at medicusbooks.com, about a common letter of Boegehold and Herzberger to Erwin Lihotzky at the Ernst Leitz GmbH
  7. ^ Inscription in first edition "Modern Geometrical Optics" found in A.C.S. van Heel's library: "To my friend A.C.S van Heel, who so generously helped me, when I had to flee Nazi Germany, Max Herzberger".
  8. ^ Herzberger, M., and N. McClure, The design of superachromatic lenses, Appl. Opt. Vol.2, pp. 553–560 (June 1963)
  9. ^ Maximilian J. Herzberger Frederic Ives Medalist for 1962, JOSA, Vol. 53, Issue 6, pp. 657-657 (1963)
  10. ^ "Frederic Ives Medal / Quinn Prize - Awards - OSA.org | The Optical Society". osa.org. Retrieved 2015-02-14.
  11. ^ Oct. 1946 with Harvey O Hoadley, US 2487873 at google patents
  12. ^ May 1965 with Nancy R Mcclure, US 3395962 at google patents

External links