Wolfgang Paul Born: 10-Aug-1913 Birthplace: Lorenzkirch, Germany Died: 6-Dec-1993 Location of death: Bonn, Germany Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Male Religion: Lutheran Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Nationality: Germany Executive summary: Co-Inventor of the ion trap German physicist Wolfgang Paul invented the Paul trap, a device that made possible the detailed study of subatomic particles by trapping individual ions for extended observation. A Paul trap is similar to Hans G. Dehmelt's Penning trap, but is based on somewhat different principles. It features two electrical plates or end caps, with a circular electrode between, which traps particles in its electrical field, but isolates these trapped ions and electrons from temperature, pressure, and other outside influences. The device's trapping mechanism made possible the development of atomic clocks, and has proven valuable in the study of atomic structures. With Dehmelt and Norman F. Ramsey, Paul won the Nobel Prize in 1989.
Not to be confused with Wolfgang Pauli, an earlier Nobel laureate in Physics. Father: Theodor Paul (professor of chemistry, d. 1928) Mother: Elisabeth Ruppel Wife: Liselotte Hirsche (m. for 36 years, d.) Daughter: Jutta (art historian) Daughter: Regine (pharmacist) Son: Lorenz (physicist at University of Wuppertal) Son: Stephan (physicist at TU-Munich) Wife: Doris Walch-Paul (literature profesor at University of Bonn, m. 1979)
University: Technical University of Munich (attended, 1932-34) University: BS, Technical University of Berlin (1937) University: PhD Physics, Technical University of Berlin (1940) Teacher: Physics, University of Kiel (1940-44) Lecturer: Physics, University of Göttingen (1944-50) Professor: Physics, University of Göttingen (1950-52) Professor: Physics, University of Bonn (1952-81) Administrator: Institute of Physics, University of Bonn (1952-81)
Nobel Prize for Physics 1989 (with Hans G. Dehmelt and Norman F. Ramsey) Alexander von Humboldt Foundation President (1979-89)
CERN Director of Nuclear Physics (1964-67) German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
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