Otto Sackur
German chemist (1880–1914)
Otto Sackur (28 September 1880 in Breslau, Germany – 17 December 1914 in Berlin, Germany) was a German physical chemist.
He is known for the development of the Sackur–Tetrode equation, which he developed independently of Hugo Tetrode. His and Tetrode's names are also combined to name the Sackur–Tetrode constant derived using the equation.
Sackur studied at the University of Breslau, receiving his doctorate there in 1901. He then worked in London before joining the Fritz Haber Institute in Berlin. He died in an explosion after mixing two chemicals.[1]
References
- ^ * 4. (a) Charles, Daniel. (2005). Master Mind - the Rise and Fall of Fritz Haber, the Nobel Laureate who Launched the Age of Chemical Warfare, (pg. 155). New York: Harper Collins Publishers.
External links
- Works by or about Otto Sackur at Internet Archive
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constants
- Isaac Newton (Newtonian constant of gravitation)
- Amedeo Avogadro (Avogadro constant)
- Michael Faraday (Faraday constant)
- Johann Josef Loschmidt (Loschmidt constant)
- Johann Jakob Balmer
- Josef Stefan (Stefan–Boltzmann constant)
- Ludwig Boltzmann (Boltzmann constant, Stefan–Boltzmann constant)
- Johannes Rydberg (Rydberg constant)
- J. J. Thomson
- Max Planck (Planck constant)
- Wilhelm Wien
- Otto Sackur
- Niels Bohr (Bohr radius)
- Edwin Hubble (Hubble constant)
- Hugo Tetrode
- Douglas Hartree
- Brian Josephson (Josephson constant)
- Klaus von Klitzing (von Klitzing constant)
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