- Source: Haitinger Prize
The Haitinger Prize of the Austrian Academy of Sciences was founded in 1904 by the chemist and factory director, Ludwig Camillo Haitinger (1860–1945), who created the award in honor of his father, Karl Ludwig Haitinger. From 1905 to 1943 it was awarded every year, for "studies in chemistry and physics that proved to be of great practical use for industrial applications". The prize was awarded for the last time in the year 1954.
Winners
1905 Friedrich Hasenöhrl for electromagnetic theory
1906 F. Ratz
Rudolf Scheuble for candles which burn in color
1907 Robert Kremann for research on esters
1908 Marian Smoluchowski for theoretical investigation of Brownian motion
1909 F. Haiser
F. Wenzel
1910 Anton Skrabal for research on kinetic reactions of potassium permanganate
1911 Gustav Jaumann for authoring the corotational rates known as “Jaumann derivatives”
1912 Albert Defant for atmospheric physics and weather research
Wilhelm Schmidt for research on microclimatology
1913 Franz Faltis for research on opiates, particularly morphine
Otto Hönigschmid for measurement of atomic mass
1914 Karl Przibram for studies on the electrical charge of fog particles
1915 Heinrich Mache for absolute measurement method of radioactivity
1916 Emil Abel for catalysis research
1917 Felix Ehrenhaft for photophoresis and effects on the interaction of light with particles
1918 Wolfgang Joseph Pauli (the father of the Nobel laureate Wolfgang Ernst Pauli) for his research on the chemistry of colloids.
1919 Max Bamberger
Julius Zellner
1920 Erwin Schrödinger for fundamentals of color theory
Hans Thirring for studies on general relativity
1921 Alfons Klemenc for studies on electrochemistry
1922 Alois Zinke for condensed ring systems
Anton Kailan for research on radium and ultraviolet radiation
1923 Adolph Smekal for research on quantum theory of dispersion
1924 Franz Aigner for underwater sound navigation
Gerhard Kirsch for research on nuclear physics and geologic time measurement
1925 Robert Kremann for the discovery of electrolyte effect of alloys
Ludwig Moser for quantitative rules for metals
1926 Georg Stetter for using electronics to measure the energy of nuclear particles
1927 Moritz Kohn for organic chemistry
J. Lindner for organic chemistry
1928 Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Kohlrausch for the law of independent migration of ions
1929 Fritz Feigel for his techniques in analytical chemistry
L. Schmid for organic chemistry
1931 Ewald Schmidt for research on radioactivity
1932 Otto Redlich for research on the properties of water and aqueous solutions
1933 Elizabeth Rona for her method of extracting polonium
Berta Karlik for her work on luminescence
1935 Joseph Mattauch for development of the Mattauch isobar rule
1936 Otto Kratky for studies on colloidal particles
1937 Marietta Blau and Hertha Wambacher for the identification of alpha-particles and protons
1939 Herbert Haberlandt for luminescence of fluorites
1947 Berta Karlik for her discovery of Astatine
See also
List of chemistry awards
List of physics awards
References
Sources
Angetter, Daniela; Martischnig, Michael (2005). "Biografisches Handbuch österreichischer Physiker und Physikerinnen". Biografien österreichischer (Physiker)innen: Eine Auswahl. Vienna, Austria: Österreichischen Staatsarchiv. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
Blumesberger, Susanne; Doppelhofer, Michael; Mauthe, Gabrielle, eds. (2002). Handbuch österreichischer Autorinnen und Autoren jüdischer Herkunft: 18. bis 20. Jahrhundert. München, Germany: K. G. Saur. ISBN 978-3-11-094900-1.
Killy, Walther (2006). Dictionary of German Biography. Vol. 10: Thibaut - Zycha. München, Germany: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-096116-4.
Moore, Walter J. (1992). Schrödinger: Life and Thought. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-43767-7.
Pohl, W. Gerhard (2004). Die wissenschaftliche Welt von gestern: die Preisträger des Ignaz L. Lieben-Preises 1865-1937 und des Richard Lieben-Preises 1912-1928 : ein Kapitel österreichischer Wissenschaftsgeschichte in Kurzbiografien (in German). Vienna, Austria: Böhlau Verlag Wien. ISBN 978-3-205-77303-0.
Reif-Acherman, Simón (2008). "Otto Redlich: chemist and gentleman from the 'old school'". Química Nova. 31 (7): 1901–1908. doi:10.1590/S0100-40422008000700053.
Rentetzi, Maria (2008). Trafficking materials and gendered experimental practices: radium research in early 20th century Vienna. New York City, New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13558-0.
Rosner, Robert W. (2003). Marietta Blau - Sterne der Zertrümmerung: Biographie einer Wegbereiterin der modernen Teilchenphysik. Vienna, Austria: Böhlau Verlag. ISBN 978-3-205-77088-6.
Tanner, R.I.; Walters, K. (1998). Rheology: An Historical Perspective: An Historical Perspective. Amsterdam, the Netherlands: Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-054057-3.
Volk, Greg (2012). 19th Natural Philosophy Alliance Proceedings. Vol. 9. Eagan, Minnesota: Natural Philosophy Alliance. ISBN 978-1-105-95509-9.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Erwin Schrödinger
- Haitinger Prize
- Marian Smoluchowski
- Friedrich Hasenöhrl
- Erwin Schrödinger
- Fritz Pregl Prize
- Women in physics
- Elizabeth Rona
- Heinrich Mache
- Franz Aigner
- Timeline of women in science