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  1. Heinrich Friedrich Weber (/ ˈ v eɪ b ər /; German:; 7 November 1843 – 24 May 1912) was a physicist born in the town of Magdala, near Weimar.

  2. Heinrich Friedrich Weber was a German physicist who was important in the history of the Zürich Polytechnic. His most famous student was Einstein.

  3. Heinrich Weber was a German mathematician whose main work was in algebra, number theory, analysis and applications of analysis to mathematical physics. View four larger pictures. Biography. Heinrich Weber was born in Heidelberg, the son of Georg Weber (1808-1888) who was an historian, author of History of the World, and principal of a high school.

  4. Dec 7, 2022 · Heinrich Friedrich Weber ( /ˈveɪbər/; [ 1] German: [ˈveːbɐ]; 7 November 1843 – 24 May 1912) was a physicist born in the town of Magdala, near Weimar. 2. Biography. Around 1861 he entered the University of Jena, where Ernst Abbe became the first of two physicists who decisively influenced his career (Weiss 1912, pp. 44–45).

  5. Noteworthy is the measurement, by Heinrich Friedrich Weber, of the specific heat of diamond. These data were later used by Albert Einstein for the first application of the quantum hypothesis on solids. Weber also anticipated, from experimental data, the displacement law named after Wien, almost 10 years before the latter.

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  6. Outstanding examples of early research on condensed-matter systems include the experimental research on the specific heat of solids by Heinrich Friedrich Weber (1875-1912), on ferromagnetism by Pierre Weiss (1902-1919), on dielectrics by Peter Debye (1920-1927), and on ferroelectricity by Paul Scherrer (1920-1960), all carried out at the former ...

  7. Heinrich Weber may refer to: Heinrich Friedrich Weber (1843–1912), German physicist; Heinrich Martin Weber (1842–1913), German mathematician; Ernst Heinrich Weber (1795-1878), German physician and psychologist; Heinrich Emil Weber, Swiss mathematician, one of the designers of the NEMA encryption system