- Friedrich Hopfner
Infobox_Scientist
name = Friedrich Hopfner
image_width =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1881|10|28|df=y
birth_place =Trutnov ,Czech Republic
death_date = death date and age|1949|9|5|1881|10|28|df=y
death_place =Hintersteiner See ,Austria
residence =
citizenship =
nationality = Austrian
field =Geodesy ,Geophysics ,Astronomy
work_institution =Prague Observatory
Maritime Observatory in Trieste
Vienna Bureau of Geodesy
Austrian Geodetic SurveyVienna University of Technology
alma_mater =Charles University in Prague
(German division)
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for =
author_abbreviation_bot =
author_abbreviation_zoo =
prizes = "Oskar Freiherr von Rothschild-Preis"
"Seegenpreis"
religion =
footnotes =Friedrich Hopfner (
28 October 1881 —5 September 1949 ) was an Austriangeodesist ,geophysicist andplanetary scientist .As an officer of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire he began his scientific work at the Bureau ofMeteorology . In 1921 he became ChiefAstronomer at the new Geodetic Survey of Austria ("Bureau of Weights, Measures and Surveying" or "Bundesamt für Eich- und Vermessungswesen"). From 1936 to 1942 and from 1945 to 1949 he was a Professor at theVienna University of Technology (TU Wien) and over the 1948-9 term he was the university'srector .Life
He was born on
28 October 1881 in Trautenau, northernBohemia (nowTrutnov ,Czech Republic ). He studiedmathematics ,physics ,geophysics andastronomy at theUniversity of Prague and theUniversity of Munich between 1899 and 1904. In 1905 at theCharles University in Prague he delivered his dissertation on "The average and relative distribution of temperature on the Earth's surface."His first job was as an assistant at the
Prague Observatory , and then at the Bureaux of Meteorology inBerlin ,Innsbruck andVienna . In 1908 he transferred to the Maritime Observatory inTrieste (now the "Istituto Talassografico di Trieste" or ITT), then in 1912 to the Bureau of Geodesy ("Gradmessungsbüro") in Vienna.During
World War I he was head of the meteorological service for theIsonzo army ofAustria-Hungary . In 1921 he became ChiefAstronomer at the new Geodetic Survey of Austria ("Bureau of Weights, Measures and Surveying" or "Bundesamt für Eich- und Vermessungswesen").In 1936 he was appointed Professor of Theoretical
Geodesy andSpherical astronomy at theVienna University of Technology , as successor toRichard Schumann . In autumn 1942 he declined Hitler's invitation into his newly-created Academy of Sciences ("Akademie der Wissenschaften") in Prague, and was forced into retirement, moving with his family toSchönbühel on theDanube , where he devoted himself exclusively to research. After the war he was restored to his position in Vienna, and was later elected Dean of the Faculty of Applied Maths and Physics.His pleasant friendliness made him popular with colleagues and students, and in the 1948-9 term he was voted "
Rector magnificus " at the Technical High School of Vienna. Sadly, in the last month of his incumbency, he drowned in a boating accident on theHintersteiner See , nearKufstein .Work
From the very beginning of his career he made valuable contributions to
astronomy ,geodesy ,geophysics andmeteorology , in the applied fields as well as the theoretical, and published a great deal on all four subjects. He wrote three well-known textbooks.Trajectories of planetoids
Hopfner's early work was mostly concerned with astronomy and meteorology. In collaboration with
Johann Palisa , he determined the trajectories andephemerides of a number ofplanetoid s.Mathematical foundations of a theory of
climatology In 1906 he began researching problems bordering both astronomy and geophysics, starting with the warming of the Earth by the Sun. We owe mainly to Hopfner the sharp distinction he made between the daily and seasonal average irradiation. In 1927 he went into the subject in more detail, laying out his discoveries in his "Mathematical Foundations of an Astronomical Theory of Climatic Variation" ("Mathematische Grundlagen zu einer astronomischen Theorie der Klimaschwankungen"), which won him the "Seegenpreis".
Research on tides
His work at the Maritime Observatory in
Trieste led him to study oceanographical questions, for example on tides and the determination of water levels in Trieste harbour, both very important practical problems.Advanced geodesy and geophysics
With his entry to the "Gradmessungsbüro" in 1921 he turned to geomensuration and geophysics, in particular his work on the meridian line
Großenhain -Kremsmünster -Pola, which detailed the use of comparisons ofvertical deflection s. Later he studied the important problem of thegeoid (the Earth's shape), for example through the reduction of observations of weight and the subject known asisostasy (the study of gravitational equilibrium within the Earth). From the 1930s he concentrated on the study of thereference ellipsoid andphase diagram s, as well as the elliptical shape of the Equator, the level spheroid, and the triaxialJacobi ellipsoid .Contributions to Austrian science
Hopfner did pioneering work on the determination of geographical distances without the use of wires (the first employment of time-signals), as well as on
gravimetry . His study of the Earth's magnetic field helped make a name for the ZAMG, or Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics ("Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik") in Vienna.Memberships and responsibilities
* Member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences
* President of the Austrian Geodetic Commission (ÖKIE, now ÖGK)
* Correspondent to the Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics (ZMG)
* Corresponding member of the German Society for Science and the Arts in the Republic of Czechoslovakia
* Member of the Mathematical Society of ViennaAwards
* 1912 "Oskar Freiherr von Rothschild-Preis" for astronomy, from the Vienna Academy of Sciences
* 1923 "Seegenpreis" from the Society for the Promotion of German Science, Art and Literature in Bohemia
* 1931 Given the title "Hofrat" (Counsellor)
* 1977 The Austrian Geodetic Commission begins awarding the "Friedrich Hopfner-Medaille" in his honour; it is given every four years for outstanding work in the field of geodesyBibliography
Hopfner published a total of eighty-one works. In this partial list, the three textbooks are indicated with bold type.
* 1905 "Die Verteilung der solaren Wärmestrahlung auf der Erde", "Monthly Weather Review" (1906).
* 1907 "Untersuchungen über die Bestrahlung der Erde durch die Sonne mit Berücksichtigung der Absorption der Wärmestrahlen durch die Atmosphärische Luft nach dem Lambert'schen Gesetz. Erste Mitteilung: Analytische Behandlung des Problems." (pp.167-234) in: "Über das Vorkommender seltenen Erden auf der Sonne", Wien, Verlag Hölder
* 1913 "Die Gezeiten im Hafen von Triest", Wien, Verlag Hölder, in: "Sitzungsberichte der Akademie der Wissenschaften", Math.-Nat. Klasse, Abt.2a; Bd.122, Heft 9, Wien
* 1922 "Der Großenhain-Kremsmünster -Pola" (with R. Schumann), "Astro-geodätische Arbeiten Österreichs", Neue Folge Bd.1
* 1927 "Mathematische Grundlagen zu einer astronomischen Theorie der Klimaschwankungen"
* 1927 Die Figur der Erde, Bundesverlag Wien
* 1931 "Neue Wege zur Bestimmung der Erdfigur." (Ergebnisse der Kosm. Physik Bd.1), Leipzig
* 1931 "Die Gezeiten der Meere" in "Handbuch der Experimentalphysik"
* 1933 "Die Gezeiten der festen Erde" in Gutenberg's "Handbuch der Geophysik"
* 1933 Physikalische Geodäsie ("Mathematik und ihre Anwendungen", Bd. 14), Akademischer Druck, Leipzig
* 1936 "Figur der Erde, Dichte und Druck im Erdinnern" in Gutenberg's "Handbuch der Geophysik" Bd.1, pp.139-308, Berlin
* 1949 Grundlagen der Höheren Geodäsie (Erdmessung ), Wien, Springer-Verlag.External links (German)
*
* [http://www.aeiou.at/aeiou.encyclop.h/h865979.htm Österreich-Lexikon]
* [http://www.calsky.com/lexikon/de/txt/f/fr/friedrich_hopfner.php F. Hopfner in der Deutschen Enzyklopädie]
* [http://www.igms.tugraz.at/oegk Ehrungen: Österreiche Geodätische Kommission, Friedrich Hopfner-Medaille]
* [http://www.igms.tugraz.at/oegk/Kommission/Statuten/statutenhopfner.htm Verleihungskriterien der Friedrich Hopfner-Medaille]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.