Peter Debye AKA Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Debije Born: 24-Mar-1884 Birthplace: Maastricht, Netherlands Died: 2-Nov-1966 Location of death: Ithaca, NY Cause of death: Heart Failure Remains: Buried, Pleasant Grove Cemetery, Ithaca, NY
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Physicist Nationality: United States Executive summary: Studied molecular structure, dipoles Dutch-American physicist Peter Debye (pronounced dē-BYE) studied under Arnold Sommerfeld, and developed methods using induced dipole moments and x-ray diffraction to investigate molecular structures. In 1912 he demonstrated the Debye equation for dipole moments, a means to determine bond angles and the degree of polarity of covalent bonds, which allows the spatial configuration of molecules to be deduced with far greater specificity than had previously been possible. In the same year he advanced Albert Einstein's theory of specific heat, by factoring low-frequency phonons into Einstein's methodology. In 1915 he showed how temperature alters x-ray diffraction patterns in crystalline solids. In 1923, working with Erich Hückel (1896-1980), he introduced the Debye-Hückel equation, a key finding in the modern understanding of electrolytic solutions and the basis for the general theory of strong electrolytes. Though he was inarguably a physicist by training and career, he won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1936, for "his contributions to the study of molecular structure through his investigations on dipole moments and on the diffraction of x-rays and electrons in gases.”
Working at the University of Berlin, he cooperated with Germany's Nazi regime in demanding that Jews resign academic posts, but drew the line when he was ordered to renounce his Dutch citizenship. Instead he fled to America, where he spent the remainder of his career at Cornell University, and became a US citizen in 1946. He also studied electric conductivity in salt solutions, the heat capacity of solids, the theory of polar molecules, and the van der Waals forces between molecules. He is the namesake of the Peter Debye Award in Physical Chemistry, presented annually by the American Chemical Society since 1962. Father: William Debije (machinist) Mother: Maria Reumkens Debije Wife: Mathilde Alberer (m. 1913, one son, one daughter) Son: Peter Paul Rupprecht Debye (physicist, b. 1916) Daughter: Mathilde Maria Debye-Saxinger (b. 1921)
High School: Maastricht High School, Maastricht, Netherlands (1901) University: BS Electrical Engineering, RWTH Aachen University (1905) University: PhD, University of Munich (1908) Lecturer: Theoretical Physics, University of Munich (1910-11) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Zürich (1911-12) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Utrecht (1912-14) Professor: Theoretical Physics, University of Göttingen (1914-20) Professor: Physics, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich (1920-27) Professor: Physics, University of Leipzig (1927-34) Professor: Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Berlin (1934-39) Professor: Chemistry, Cornell University (1940-52)
Rumford Medal 1930 Lorentz Medal 1935 Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1936 Benjamin Franklin Medal 1937 (by the Franklin Institute) Willard Gibbs Medal 1949
Max Planck Medal 1950 ACS Kendall Award in Colloid or Surface Chemistry 1957
Nichols Medal 1961
Priestley Medal 1963 Alpha Chi Sigma Chemistry Fraternity German Physical Society
New York Academy of Sciences Pontifical Academy of Sciences Royal Society Foreign Member Russian Academy of Sciences Physikalische Zeitschrift Editor (1915-40)
Units of Measure debye, a measure of molecular dipole moments Asteroid Namesake 30852 Debye Lunar Crater Debye (49.6° N, 176.2° W, 142 km. diameter) Naturalized US Citizen 1946 Heart Attack Apr-1966 Heart Attack 2-Nov-1966 (fatal) Dutch Ancestry
German Ancestry
Author of books:
The Collected Papers of Peter J. W. Debye (1954, papers)
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