Julius Lugwig Weisbach


Quick Info

Born
10 August 1806
Mittelschmiedeberg (near Annaberg), Germany
Died
24 February 1871
Freiberg, Germany

Summary
Julius Weisbach was a German mathematician who wrote on mechanics, hydraulics and surveying as well as mathematics.

Biography

Julius Weisbach's father was Christian Gottlieb Weisbach and his mother was Christina Rebekka Stephan. Julius's father was the foreman at a mine, so the family were not well off, particularly since there were nine children. Of the children, Julius was the second youngest.

Weisbach was educated at the lyceum in Annaberg near his home town, then at the Bergschule in Freiberg. Having completed the courses at these schools by 1822, Weisbach wanted to continue his education. However, his parents could not afford to finance him so he borrowed money to enable him to attend the Bergakademie in Freiberg.

In 1827 Weisbach was advised by Friedrich Mohs to study at Göttingen. Mohs was the famous German mineralogist who, in 1812, devised a scale, now known as the Mohs scale, to determine the hardness of a mineral by observing whether its surface is scratched by various substances of known hardness. Weisbach followed Mohs' advice and spent two years in Göttingen before moving to the University of Vienna. The reason for this move was that Mohs had gone to Vienna. In Vienna, Weisbach studied mathematics, physics and mechanics.

During 1830 Weisbach travelled on foot for six months through Hungary, the Tyrol, Bavaria, and Bohemia. From 1831 he taught mathematics at the Freiberg Gymnasium and, starting in 1832, he also taught mathematics at the Bergakademie in Freiberg. In this same year of 1832, Weisbach married Marie Winkler and they would have a son who was to became the Professor of Mineralogy at the Bergakademie in Freiberg.

In 1836 Weisbach was promoted to professor, and his expertise was now such that in addition to mathematics he was professor of mine machinery and of surveying. He had, at this stage only one publication, but this would soon change. From around 1839 he became interested in hydraulics and some of his most important work would be done on this topic. This interest in hydraulics seems to have been as a result of Weisbach visiting the Paris Industrial Exposition in 1839.

His interests were always wide and this is reflected in the range of courses that Weisbach was teaching around this time: descriptive geometry, crystallography, optics, mechanics and machine design.

In 1855 Zürich Polytechnikum opened, and in the year prior to that they made a serious attempt to appoint quality staff. For example they appointed Clausius as professor of physics, but Weisbach was not tempted by the offer that was made to him and preferred to remain in Freiberg. In 1855 Weisbach was back in Paris, this time visiting the World Exposition which was held there.

We have indicated the range of Weisbach's interests and this can be seen from the topics of the fourteen books and 59 papers he wrote on mechanics, hydraulics, surveying, and mathematics. It is in hydraulics that his work was most influential, with his books on the topic continuing to be of importance well into the 20th century.

Among the honours Weisbach received for his contributions to science were honorary degrees from Leipzig, and election to membership of various learned societies such as the St Petersburg Academy of Sciences, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Accademia dei Lincei.


References (show)

  1. H Rouse, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). See THIS LINK.
  2. H Rouse and S Ince, History of Hydraulics (New York, 1963).
  3. A A Gusak, Background and origins of the development of the theory of approximation of functions (Russian), Istor.-Mat. Issled. No. 14 (1961), 289-348.

Additional Resources (show)

Other websites about Julius Weisbach:

  1. Dictionary of Scientific Biography
  2. zbMATH entry

Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update May 2000