Everything about Walther Mei Ner totally explained
Fritz Walther Meißner (or Meissner) (
December 16,
1882,
Berlin –
November 16,
1974,
Munich) was a German technical physicist.
He studied mechanical engineering and physics at the
Technical University of Munich, his doctoral supervisor being
Max Planck. He then entered the
Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt. From 1922 to 1925, he established the world's third largest Helium-liquifier, and discovered in 1933 the
Meissner effect, damping of the
magnetic field in
superconductors. One year later, he was called as chair in technical physics at the
Technical University of Munich.
After
World War II, he became the president of the
Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities. In 1946, he was appointed director of the academy's first low temperature research commission. Laboratories were located in Herrsching am Ammersee until 1965, when they were moved to
Garching. Meißner died in Munich in 1974.
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