Eugen Goldstein
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Eugen Goldstein | |
Eugen Goldstein
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Born | September 5, 1850 Gleiwitz, Upper Silesia (now Gliwice, Poland) |
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Died | December 25, 1930 |
Residence | Germany |
Nationality | German |
Fields | physics |
Institutions | Berlin Observatory Potsdam Observatory |
Doctoral advisor | Helmholtz |
Known for | anode rays |
Eugen Goldstein (September 5, 1850 – December 25, 1930) was a German physicist. He was an early investigator of discharge tubes, the discoverer of anode rays, and is sometimes credited with the discovery of the proton.[1]
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[edit] Life
Goldstein was born in 1850 at Gleiwitz, Upper Silesia, now known as Gliwice, Poland. He studied at Breslau and later, under Helmholtz, in Berlin. Goldstein worked at the Berlin Observatory from 1878 to 1890, but spent most of his career at the Potsdam Observatory, where he became head of the astrophysical section in 1927. He died in 1930 and was buried in the Weißensee Cemetery in Berlin.
[edit] Work
In the mid-nineteenth century, Julius Plücker investigated the light emitted in discharge tubes and the influence of magnetic fields on the glow. Later, in 1869, Johann Wilhelm Hittorf studied discharge tubes with energy rays extending from a negative electrode, the cathode. These rays produced a fluorescence when they hit a tube's glass walls, and when interrupted by a solid object they cast a shadow.
By the 1870s Goldstein had undertaken his own investigations of discharge tubes, and named the light emissions studied by others kathodenstrahlen, or cathode rays. In 1886, he discovered that discharge tubes with a perforated cathode also emit a glow at the cathode end. Goldstein concluded that in addition to the already-known cathode rays, later recognized as electrons moving from the negatively-charged cathode toward the positively-charged anode, there is another ray that travels in the opposite direction. Because these latter rays passed through the holes, or channels, in the cathode, Goldstein called them kanalstrahlen, or canal rays. They are composed of positive ions whose identity depends on the residual gas inside the tube. It was another of Helmholtz's students, Wilhelm Wien, who later conducted extensive studies of canal rays, and in time this work would become part of the basis for mass spectrometry.
The anode ray with the smallest e/m ratio comes from hydrogen gas (H2), and is made of H+ ions. In other words this ray is made of protons. Goldstein's work with anode rays of H+ was apparently the first observation of the proton, although strictly speaking it might be argued that it was Wien who measured the e/m ratio of the proton and should be credited with its discovery.
Goldstein also used discharge tubes to investigate comets. An object, such as a small ball of glass or iron, placed in the path of cathode rays produces secondary emissions to the sides, flaring outwards in a manner reminiscent of a comet's tail. See the work of Hedenus for pictures and additional information.[2]
[edit] Other
Goldstein's atomic theory was very similar to the modern one, but because of differing opinions of his colleagues, he was (and is) widely ignored.
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ C. E. Moore, B. Jaselskis, A. von Smolinski (1985). "The Proton". Journal of Chemical Education 62: 859-860.
- ^ M. Hedenus (2002). "Eugen Goldstein and his laboratory work at Berlin Observatory". Astronomische Nachrichten 323: 567-569. doi: .
[edit] Further reading
- Hedenus, M., Der Komet in der Entladungsröhre, 2007, GNT-Verlag
- Brief obituary of Eugen Goldstein, Nature, 1931, volume 127, page 171
- Goldstein, E., "Über eine noch nicht untersuchte Strahlungsform an der Kathodeinducirter Entladungen" in Berlin Akd. Monatsber. II, 1886, page 691
- Goldstein, E. (1898). "Ueber eine noch nicht untersuchte Strahlungsform an der Kathode inducirter Entladungen". Annalen der Physik 300 (1): 38-48. doi: .
- Goldstein, E., "Vorläufige Mittheilungen über electrishe Entladungen Verdünnten Gasen" in Berlin Akd. Monatsber., 1876, page 279
- von Traubenberg, H. Rausch (September, 1930). "Die Bedeutung der Kanalstrahlen für die Entwicklung der Physik - Eugen Goldstein zur Vollendung seines achtzigsten Lebensjahres". Naturwissenschaften 18 (36): 773-776. doi: .|url=http://springer.metapress.com/content/l332316358227788/fulltext.pdf|format=PDF|accessdate=2007-09-11