Josef Loschmidt: Difference between revisions

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(New page: {{subpages}} '''Joseph Loschmidt''' (1821-1895), while relatively little-known today, made major contributions to physical chemistry, thermodynamics, [[electromagnetic force|electr...)
 
imported>Paul Wormer
(Double last name: Clerk Maxwell)
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Loschmidt, to historians of science, is a man whose name should have been on more basic ideas, or at least a coauthor. He conceived the concept of a [[benzene ring]] before [[Friedrich Kekulé]], but did not have the chemical bonding quite right. His contributions to thermodynamics led to the work by [[James Maxwell]] and  [[Ludwig Boltzman]]. [[Heinrich Hertz]] built on his ideas. <ref name=Lienhard>{{citation
Loschmidt, to historians of science, is a man whose name should have been on more basic ideas, or at least a coauthor. He conceived the concept of a [[benzene ring]] before [[Friedrich Kekulé]], but did not have the chemical bonding quite right. His contributions to thermodynamics led to the work by [[James Maxwell|James Clerk Maxwell]] and  [[Ludwig Boltzman]]. [[Heinrich Hertz]] built on his ideas. <ref name=Lienhard>{{citation
  | contribution = No. 1858: Johann Josef Loschmidt
  | contribution = No. 1858: Johann Josef Loschmidt
  | first = John H. | last = Lienhard  
  | first = John H. | last = Lienhard  

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Joseph Loschmidt (1821-1895), while relatively little-known today, made major contributions to physical chemistry, thermodynamics, electromagnetism and organic chemistry. His work on the size of molecules was sufficiently important that in German-speaking countries, "Loschmidt's number" is the term for what English-speaking countries call Avogadro's number. [1]

Loschmidt, to historians of science, is a man whose name should have been on more basic ideas, or at least a coauthor. He conceived the concept of a benzene ring before Friedrich Kekulé, but did not have the chemical bonding quite right. His contributions to thermodynamics led to the work by James Clerk Maxwell and Ludwig Boltzman. Heinrich Hertz built on his ideas. [2]

References

  1. Bader, Alfred & Leonard Parker (March 2001), Physics Today
  2. Lienhard, John H., No. 1858: Johann Josef Loschmidt, Engines of our Ingenuity, College of Engineering, University of Houston