- Emil Cohn
Emil Georg Cohn (
28 September 1854 –28 January 1944 ), was a Germanphysicist .Life
Emil Cohn was born in
Neustrelitz ,Mecklenburg , was the son of August Cohn (* 1826,lawyer for Neustrelitz) and Charlotte Cohn (1835 - 1924). At the age of 17, Emil Cohn had begun to studyjurisprudence at theUniversity of Leipzig . However, At theRuprecht Karl University of Heidelberg and theUniversity of Strasbourg he began to studyphysics . In Strasbourg, he graduated in 1879. From 1881 to 1884, he was an assistant ofAugust Kundt at the physical institute. In 1884 he habilitated in theoretical physics and was admitted as a private-lecturer. From 1884 to 1918, he was a faculty-member of the university Strasbourg and was nominated as an assistant professor in 27 September 1884. He dealt with experimental-physics at first, and then turned completely to theoretical physics. In 1918 he was nominated as an extraordinary professor.After the end of
World War I and the occupation ofAlsace-Lorraine byFrance , Cohn and his family were expelled (on the Christmas Eve 1918) from Strasbourg. In April 1919, he was nominated as a professor at theUniversity of Rostock . From June 1920, he gave lectures about theoretical physics at theUniversity of Freiburg . In 1935 he retired in Heidelberg where he lived until 1939. He resigned from theDeutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (DPG) together with other physicists likeRichard Gans ,Leo Graetz ,George Jaffé , Walter Kaufmann, in protest at the despotism of the NS-regime.Cohn was a baptized
Protestant and was married with Marie Goldschmidt (1864 - 1950), with whom he had two daughters. Because of his Jewish descent he found himself forced in 1939 under the pressure of the NS-regime to emigrate to Switzerland. He lived inHasliberg-Hohfluh at first, and from 1942 inRinggenberg ,Switzerland , where he died at the age of 90.Cohn’s younger brother Carl Cohn (1857-1931) was a successful overseas-merchant from
Hamburg , who worked from 1921 until 1929 as a senator in Hamburg. [Fritz Emde (1947) Nachruf auf Emil Cohn, "Archiv der Elektrischen Übertragung" (AEÜ) 1 (1/2), 81 - 83]Work
At the change of the 19. to the 20. Century, Emil Cohn was one of the most respectable experts in the area of theoretical
electrodynamics . He was unsatisfied with the Lorentzian theory of electrodynamics for moving bodies and proposed an independent theory. His alternative theory, which was based on a modification of the Maxwell field-equations, was compatible to all relevant electrodynamic and optical experiments, incl. theMichelson-Morley experiment .Some of his insights entailed certain aspects of
special relativity , in particular some aspects of the interpretation of theLorentz transformation by. AfterHenri Poincaré but beforeAlbert Einstein , he interpreted Lorentz's local time as the result ofclock synchronisation by light signals (1904). However, he believed that mechanical clocks still show the "true" time. He also eliminated theluminiferous aether and replaced it likeErnst Mach by the fixed stars (1901). Because of internal failures of his theory (like different light speeds in different directions) his theory was superseded by Lorentz's and Einstein's. [Cite book
last=Miller, A.I.
year=1981
title= Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity. Emergence (1905) and early interpretation (1905–1911)
location= Reading
publisher=Addison–Wesley
isbn=0-201-04679-2
Seiten=191-182] [Cite journal
last=Darrigol, O.
title=Emil Cohn's electrodynamics of moving bodies
year=1995
journal=American Journal of Physics
issue=10
volume=63
pages=908 - 915] [Cite journal
last=Janssen, M. & Stachel, J.
year=2004
title=The Optics and Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies
url=http://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/Preprints/P265.PDF]ources
Publications
*" [http://www.archive.org/details/DasElektromagnetischeFeld Das Elektromagnetische Feld - Vorlesungen über die Maxwell'sche Theorie] ", Leipzig 1900 (576 S.).
*Cite journal
last=Cohn, E.
year=1901
title=Über die Gleichungen des elektromagnetischen Feldes für bewegte Körper
journal=Göttinger Nachrichten
pages =74-99
url=http://www.digizeitschriften.de/resolveppn/GDZPPN002499053*Cohn, E. (1902) „Ueber die Gleichungen des elektromagnetischen Feldes für bewegte Körper“ / [http://www.wbabin.net/physics/traillcohn |"On the equations of the electromagnetic field for moving bodies"] ; "Annalen der Physik (Series 4)", 7(1), 29-56; (but now as "digitized" German text, with parallel "English translation using modern notation", plus extra references and footnotes).
*cite journal
last=Cohn, E.
year=1904
title=Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Systeme
journal= Sitzungsberichte der Königlich Preußische Akademie der Wissenschaften
volume=40
pages =1294–1303, 1404-1416*Cohn, E. (1904) „Antikritisches zu Hrn. Wiens "Differentialgleichungen der Elektrodynamic für bewegte Körper"“ / [http://www.wbabin.net/physics/traillcohn |— 'Reply to the criticism in W.Wien's "Differential equations of the electrodynamics for moving bodies"'] ; "Annalen der Physik (Series 4)", 14(6), 208 — (but now as digitized German text, with parallel English translation, plus extra references and footnotes; — here attached to Cohn (1902) see above).
*„Physikalisches über Raum und Zeit“, "Himmel und Erde" XIII, 117 - 136 (1911); auch als Broschüre veröffentlicht: "Physikalisches über Raum und Zeit", Berlin/Leipzig 1920, 4. Auflage (30 S.).
*"Das elektromagnetische Feld - Ein Lehrbuch", 2. Auflage Berlin 1927 (366 S.).
*„Faraday und Maxwell“, "Deutsches Museum - Abhandlungen und Berichte" 4 (1), Berlin 1932 (29 S.).ee also
*
History of special relativity
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