Neumann, Franz Ernst

Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography | 2008 | Copyright

NEUMANN, FRANZ ERNST

(b. Joachimsthal, Germany [now Jachymov, Czechoslovakia]. 11 September 1798; d. Königsberg, Germany [now Kaliningrad, R.S.F.S.R.], 23 May 1895), mineralogy, physics, mathematics.

Neumann extended the Dulong-Petit lawthat the specific heats of the elements vary inversely as their atomic weightsto include compounds having similar chemical constitutions. His work in optics contributed to the establishment of the dynamical theory of light, and he formulated mathematically the laws of induction of electric currents. He also aided in developing the theory of spherical harmonics. Neumann was a highly influential teacher; many of his students became outstanding scientists, and he inaugurated the mathematical science seminar at German universities.

Neumanns mother was a divorced countess whose family prevented her marrying his father, a farmer who later became an estate agent, because he was not of noble birth. Neumann was therefore raised by his paternal grandparents. He attended the Berlin Gymnasium, where he displayed an early talent for mathematics. His education was interrupted in 1814, when he became a volunteer in the Prussian army to fight against Napoleon. He was seriously wounded on 16 June 1815 at the battle of Ligny, the prelude to Waterloo. After recovering in a Düsseldorf hospital, he rejoined his company and was mustered out of the army in February 1816.

Because his father had lost all of his resources in a fire, Neumann pursued his education under severe financial difficulties. He completed his studies at the Gymnasium and in 1817 entered the University of Berlin, studying theology in accordance with his fathers wishes. In April 1818 he left Berlin for Jena, where he began his scientific studies and was particularly attracted to mineralogy. In 1819 Neumann returned to Berlin to study mineralogy and crystallography under Christian S. Weiss, who became his close friend as well as his mentor. Weiss made the financial arrangements for Neumann to take a three-month geological field trip in Silesia during the summer of 1820, and Neumann was planning other trips for 1822 and 1823 when his father died. Thereafter Neumann and his mother became very close; his concern for her health and financial independence caused him to leave the university during 18221823 and manage her farm. Nevertheless, in 1823 he published his first work. Beiträge zur Kristallonomie, which was highly regarded in Germany; and on Weisss recommendation he was appointed curator of the mineral cabinet at the University of Berlin in November 1823.

Neumann received the doctorate at Berlin in November 1825; and in May 1826, together with Jacobi and Dove, he became a Privatdozent at the University of Königsberg. Dove and Neumann were destined to assume the physics and mineralogy courses, respectively, of Karl G. Hagen, who had been teaching botany, zoology, mineralogy, chemistry, and physics. In 1828 Neumann was advanced to the rank of lecturer, and in 1829 he was named professor of mineralogy and physics. He married Hagens daughter, Luise Florentine, in 1830; they had five children before her death in 1838. He married Wilhelmina Hagen, her first cousin, in 1843.

Neaumanns early scientific works, published between 1823 and 1830, concerned crystallography; in these he introduced the method of spherical projection and extended Weisss work on the law of zones (law of rational intercepts). At Königsberg, however, he was influenced by Bessel, Dove, and Jacobi; and he began to concentrate on mathematical physics. His first two important papers were published in Poggendorffs Annalen der Physik und Chemie (23 [1831], 139 and 4053); the first was entitled Untersuchung über die spceifisehe Wärme der Mineralien and the second Bestimmung der specifischen Wärme des Wassers in der Nähe des Siedpuncktes gegen Wasser von niedriger Temperatur, In the first article Neumann investigated the specific heats of minerals and extended the Dulong-Petit law to include compound substances having similar chemical constitutions. He arrived at what has been termed Neumanns law, that the molecular heat of a compound is equal to the sum of the atomic heats of its constituents. In the second paper Neumann considered the specific heat of water. In earlier investigations physicists had noticed that when equal quantities of hot and cold water are mixed the temperature of the mixture is lower than the arithmetic mean of the temperatures of the original quantities. This result was generally interpreted as being due to a progressive decrease in the specific heat of water from the point of fusion to that of vaporization, a conclusion that appears to be validated by a number of experiments. Neumann disclosed errors in these experiments and concluded instead that the specific heat of water increases as its temperature increases. He failed to determine, however, that an increase occurs over only a portion of the temperature range from fusion to vaporization.

In 1832 Neumann published another important paper, again in Poggendorffs Annalen, Theorie der doppelten Strahlenbrechnung abgeleitet aus der Gleichungen der Mechanik. Many physicists and mathematicians of the period were concerned with determining the conditions under which waves are propagated in ordinary elastic bodies so that they might develop a model which could serve as the optical medium; that is, they wished to evolve an elastic-solid theory of the ether in order to promote the undulatory theory of light. In his article Neumann reported obtaining a wave surface identical with that determined earlier by Augustin Cauchy, and he succeeded in deducing laws of double refraction agreeing with those of Fresnel except in the case of biaxial crystals.

Neumann encountered difficulty in explaining the passage of light from one medium to another. He attempted to overcome this obstacle in an article entitled Theoretische Untersuchungen der Gesetze, nach welchen das Licht an der Grenze zweier vollkom-men durchstchtigen Medien reflectirt und gebrochen wird, published in Abliandlungen der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, mathematische Klasse ([1835], 1160). In this paper Neumann raised the question of the mathematical expression of the conditions which must hold at the surface separating the two crystalline media, and he adopted the view that the density of the ether must be identical in all media.

Neumann and his contemporary Wilhelm Weber were the founders of the electrodynamic school in Germany, which later included, among others, Riemann, Betti, Carl Neumann, and Lorenz. The investigations and analyses of this group were guided by the assumption, held originally by Ampère, that electromagnetic phenomena resulted from direct action at a distance rather than through the mediation of a field. Neumanns major contributions were contained in two papers published in 1845 and 1848, in which he established mathematically the laws of induction of electric currents. The papers, transmitted to the Berlin Academy, were entitled Allgemeine Gesetze der inducirten elektrischen Ströme and Ober ein allgemeines Princip der mathematischen Theorie inducirter elektrischer Ströme.

As a starting point Neumann took the proposition, formulated in 1834 by F. E. Lenz after Faradays discovery of induction, that the current induced in a conductor moving in the vicinity of a galvanic current or a magnet will flow in the direction that tends to oppose the motion. In his mathematical analysis Neumann arrived at the formula E.Ds =ν C.Ds, where Ds is an element of the moving conductor, E · Ds is the elementary induced electromotive force, v is the velocity of the motion, C.Ds is the component of the inducing current, and is a constant coefficient With this formula Neumann was able to calculate the induced current in numerous particular instances. At present a common formulation is E = dN/dt, where E is the electromotive force generated in the circuit through which the number of magnetic lines of force is changing at the rate of dN/dt.

Continuing his analysis Neumann noticed a way in which the treatment of currents induced in closed circuits moving in what is now termed a magnetic field might be generalized. He saw that the induced current depends only on the alteration, caused by the motion, in the value of a particular function. Considering Amperes equations for a closed circuit, Neumann arrived at what is known as the mutual potential of two circuits, that is, the amount of mechanical work that must be performed against the electromagnetic forces in order to separate the two circuits to an infinite distance apart, when the current strengths are maintained unchanged. In modern notation the potential function, vii is written:

ds .ds is the scalar product of the two vectors ds and ds, and r their distance apart. If a fixed element ds is taken and integrated with respect to ds, the vector potential of the first circuit at the point occupied by ds is obtained. Maxwell arrived at the concept of vector potentials by another method and interpreted them as analytical measures of Faradays electrotonic state.

According to his contemporaries, only a small portion of Neumanns original scientific work was published. But he was an extremely effective teacher, and he made known many of his discoveries in heat, optics, electrodynamics, and capillarity during his lectures, thinking that priority of discovery extended equally to lectures and publications. Thus he made numerous contributions to the theory of heat without receiving credit; on occasion he thought about raising questions concerning priority but never did.

In 1833, with Jacobi, Neumann inaugurated the German mathematisch-physikalische seminar, employing such sessions to supplement his lectures and to introduce his students to research methodology. Gustav Kirchhoff attended these seminars from 1843 to 1846; his first papers on the distribution of electrical conductors, and H. Welds development of the photometer and polarimeter, were among the direct results of Neumanns seminars. Neumann pleaded continually for the construction of a physics laboratory at Konigsberg, but his hopes were thwarted during his tenure as professor; a physics institute was not completed at Konigsberg until 1885. In 1847, however, the inheritance from the estate of the parents of his second wife enabled Neumann to build a physics laboratory next to his home, the facilities of which he shared with his students. He retired as professor in 1873, although he continued his seminar for the next three years. He maintained his good health by making frequent walking tours throughout Germany and Austria, and he was still climbing mountains at the age of eighty.

Throughout his life Neumann was an ardent Prussian patriot. He aided in keeping peace in Konigsberg during the uprisings of 1848. He pleaded continually for the unification of Germany under the leadership of Prussia, and in the early 1860s he made numerous political speeches supporting Bismarck and the war against Austria. At the fiftieth anniversary of his doctorate in 1876, he was congratulated by the crown prince, later Wilhelm II; and he received honors from Bismarck in 1892 as a veteran of the campaign of 1815. Neumann was a corresponding member of every major European academy of science; he received the Copley Medal of the Royal Society in 1887.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. Original Works. Three of Neumanns most important works were published in Ostwalds Klassiker der Exakten Wissenschaften: Die mathematischen Gesetze der inducirten elektrischen Ströme, no. 10 (Leipzig, 1889); Über ein allgtmeintS Princip der mathematischen Theorie inducirter elektrischer Ströme, no. 36 (Leipzig, 1892); and Theorie der doppelten Strahlenbrechnung, no. 76 (Leipzig, 1896). Other books are Beiträge zur Kristallononrie (Berlin-Posen, 1823); Über den Einfluss der Krystallflächen bei der Reflexion tsks Lichtes und über die Intensität die gewöhnlichen and ungewöhnlichen Strahls (Berlin, 1837); and Beiträge zur Theorie dcr Kugelfunktionen (Leipzig, 1878). Some of his lectures were published in Vorlesung üher mathematischen Physik gehalten an dcr Universität Künigsberg von Franz Neumann, Carl Neumann, C. Pape, Carl Vondermühll, and E. Dorn, eds., 5 vols. (Leipzig, 18811887). His collected works were published as Franz Neumanns Gesammelte Werke, 3 vols. (Leipzig, 19061928).

II. Secondary Literature. See C. Voit, Nekrolog auf Franz Ernst Neumann, in Sitzungsberichte der Akademie Münehen 26 (1896), 338 343; Luise Neumann, Franz Neumann: Erinnerungsblätter (Tubingen-Leipzig, 1904); W. Voigt, Gedächtnissrede auf Franz Neumann, in Franz Neumanns Gesammelte Werke, I (Leipzig, 1906), 119; and Paul Volkmann, Franz Neumann , den Andenken an dem Altmeister der mathematischen Physik gewidmete Blätter (Leipzig, 1896).

See also James Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, 3rd ed. (Oxford, 1891), art. 542; and Sir Edmund Whittaker, A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity, I (London, 1951), 137138, 166167, 198200.

John G. Burke

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Neumann, Franz Ernst." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 9 Feb. 2010 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Neumann, Franz Ernst." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. (February 9, 2010). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-2830903144.html

"Neumann, Franz Ernst." Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography. 2008. Retrieved February 09, 2010 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-2830903144.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

'Und blatterte ein wenig in der Bibel': Studien zu Franz Kafkas Bibellekture...
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review Robertson, Ritchie July 1, 2004 700+ words ...ein wenig in der Bibel': Studien zu Franz Kafkas Bibellekture und ihren Auswirkungen...390) Wurzburg: Konigshausen & Neumann. 2002. 220 pp. 35 [euro]. ISBN 3...when Rohde explores Kafka's response to Ernst Troehsch's essay 'Luther und der Protestantismus...
Editorial. (reprint of the Times Literary Supplement's list of the hundred most...
Magazine article from: The Antioch Review Fogarty, Robert F. January 1, 1996 700+ words ...Koestler, Darkness at Noon * Andre Malraux, Man's Fate * Franz Neumann, Behemoth: The Structure and Practice of National Socialism...in Judaism, and Other Essays on Jewish Spirituality * Ernst Friedrich Schumacher, Small Is Beautiful * Tibor Scitovsky...
The Lost Debate: German Socialist Intellectuals and Totalitarianism.(Review)...
Magazine article from: History: Review of New Books PROWE, DIETHELM January 1, 2000 700+ words ...their peak with the publication of Franz L. Neumann's Behemoth (1942), Jones links...central than George Orwell, is Franz Borkenau (The Spanish Cockpit...were in West Berlin, above all Ernst Fraenkel (The Dual State [1941...
Engagierte Literatur zwischen den Weltkriegen.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review Midgley, David October 1, 2004 700+ words ...THORSTEN UNGER. (Schriften der Ernst-Toller-Gesellschaft, 4) Wurzburg: Konigshausen & Neumann. 2002. 410 pp. 49.50...focus of the symposium of the Ernst-Toller-Gesellschaft held...political culture of the time; in Franz-Josef Deiters's discussion...
Notes for notes.
Magazine article from: Notes Epstein, Dena J. September 1, 2004 700+ words ...volume La Mara edition (Franz Liszt's Briefe, published...papers of Alma Mahler and Franz Werfel. The Mahler...playwright, and novelist, Franz Werfel (1890-1945...Marlene Dietrich, Ernst Toller, Paul Hindemith...Ludwig Marcuse, Alfred Neumann,
CZECH REPUBLIC-CULTURE: MILENA JESENKA A "LIVING FLAME"
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire Jiri Kunc October 26, 1996 700+ words ...renown mostly through Franz Kafka's book "Letters...with her first husband, Ernst Polak, because her father...biographer, Margaret Buber-Neumann. It was an intensive...again?" wrote Buber-Neumann. Kafka died in 1924...was there that Buber-Neumann, a fellow prisoner...
Heirs of Jewish Art Collectors Pursue Works Sold in Nazi Era
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post Craig Whitlock; Shannon Smiley - Washington Post Foreign Service January 21, 2008 700+ words ...through 1945, said Michael Franz, director of Germany's Lost...Scene," a 1913 painting by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner that was displayed...for cultural affairs, Bernd Neumann, to call a summit of museum...stolen art. Two months ago, Neumann announced the creation of an...
Kafka's Milena
Magazine article from: Canadian Slavonic Papers Veronika Ambros March 1, 1998 700+ words ...drink them up along the way (Franz Kafka, Letters, 1990: 223...Milena] by Margarete Buber-Neumann, a German she met at the camp...German woman Margareta Buber-Neumann, who tried, with pleasing...German-Jewish intellectual Ernst Polak and to Cerni's father...
In review: Zurich
Magazine article from: Opera News Koegler, Horst June 1, 2001 700+ words ...premiere at the Vienna Festival, Franz Schubert's Alfonso and Estrella...musicians with vital energy. (Ernst Raffelsberger prepared the excellent...aria. As young lovers, Julia Neumann (soprano) and Boguslaw Bidzinski...watching a far-off battle. Franz von Schober, Schubert's close...
Kontingenz und Gewalt. Semiotische Strukturen und erzählte Welt in Alfred...
Magazine article from: German Quarterly Fuechtner, Veronika October 1, 2004 700+ words ...Alexanderplatz. Wrzburg: Knigshausen und Neumann, 2003. 265 pp. euro44.00 paperback...of Fritz Mauthner or the psychoanalyst Ernst Simmel, whose theories on war trauma...room. Baum also emphasizes the fact that Franz Biberkopf is still a prison inmate at...

For more facts and information, see all related premium articles

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Neumann, Franz Ernst
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography NEUMANN, FRANZ ERNST ( b . Joachimsthal, Germany [now Jachymov...mineralogy, physics, mathematics. Neumann extended the Dulong-Petit law —...developing the theory of spherical harmonics. Neumann was a highly influential teacher; many...
Neumann, Carl Gottfried
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography NEUMANN, CARL GOTTFRIED ( b . K ö nigsberg, Prussia [now...Germany, 27 March 1925) mathematics, theoretical physics . Neumann ’ s father, Franz Ernst Neumann, was professor of physics and mineralogy at K ö nigsberg...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: