Meitner, Lise, 1878-1968

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Meitner, Lise, 1878-1968

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Surname :

Meitner

Forename :

Lise

Date :

1878-1968

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マイトナー, リーゼ, 1878-1968

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Surname :

マイトナー

Forename :

リーゼ

Date :

1878-1968

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Meitner, Elise, 1878-1968

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Surname :

Meitner

Forename :

Elise

Date :

1878-1968

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1878-11-07

1878-11-07

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1968-10-27

1968-10-27

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Biographical History

Lise Meitner was born in Austria on 7 November 1878, the daughter of the Viennese lawyer, Phillip Meitner. In 1901 she entered the University of Vienna, becoming Doctor of Philosophy in 1906.

In the following year Meitner left Austria and went to Berlin [Germany] to study with the physicist Max Planck, becoming joint discoverer of Thorium-C in 1908. In 1912 Meitner moved on to work with Otto Hahn at the Chemical Institute, Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft, in Göttingen. During the First World War she served for a time as an X-ray nurse in the Austrian Army, but continuing her research, Meitner became the discoverer of Protoactinium in 1917, and the following year was made Head of the Radiation Physics Department at the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft, a position which she held until she left Germany in 1938. In 1926 Meitner became a Professor of the University of Berlin, and also a correspondent of the Royal Society of Göttingen.

In 1938 Meitner fled Nazi Germany, travelling to Sweden to work at the Nobel Institute, and in 1939 discovered nuclear fission, working jointly with her old colleague Otto Hahn. After the war, Meitner moved to the Swedish Atomic Energy Laboratory in 1947 and in 1949 took Swedish citizenship. She retired to Cambridge in 1960, dying there on 28 October 1968.

Although it was Hahn, not Meitner who was awarded the Nobel Prize for their work on nuclear fission, Meitner received many other honours. She became a member of the Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1945, a foreign member of the Royal Society of London in 1955 and a member of the Austrian Academy in 1960. She was awarded the Otto Hahn Prize in 1955, and the Enrico Fermi Award in 1966. Her publications include: Beitrage zur Physik der Atomkerne, Atomvorgange und ihre Sichtbarnachung (1926) and Der Aufbau der Atomkerne (1935).

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External Related CPF

https://viaf.org/viaf/64160163

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q56189

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n81015638

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n81015638

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Languages Used

ger

Latn

Subjects

Atomic theory

Complementarity (Physics)

Nuclear physics

Physics

Political refugees

Quantum theory

Quantum theory

Relativity (Physics)

Science

Science

Science

Scientists

Wave mechanics

Women in science

Nationalities

Austrians

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Physicists

Physicists

Women physicists

Women physicists

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Vienna

09, AT

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Birth

Cambridge

ENG, GB

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Death

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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

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Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

w6zg6v56

42390117