Vervolg op: PLAK HIER DE URL VAN HET VORIGE TOPIC --->
Homo - 1604 - Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 
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De H staat
hier!
(hier kun je je icoon in de H ook laten aanpassen) Ben je nieuw hier? Neem dan even de tijd om je voor te stellen, da's wel zo leuk voor de mensen die hier al posten. Wellicht is
dit lijstje een leuk hulpmiddel?
Reminder: als je de 300ste (laatste) post doet dan moet je ook een nieuw topic openen!
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25 februari bestaat het homotopic vier jaar, ter ere daarvan:
De vijfde Fok! HomoMeet komt eraan! (deel 2) . Jij komt natuurlijk op 4 maart ook naar Amsterdam!?
Werner HeisenbergHeisenberg was born in Würzburg, Germany, the son of Dr. August Heisenberg and Annie Wecklein. He attended school in Munich and studied Physics at the University of Munich under, amongst others, Arnold Sommerfeld and Wilhelm Wien. As a young man, Heisenberg was a scout, an enthusiastic hiker and walker and greatly loved the outdoor life. In 1922 he studied physics at Göttingen where he was taught by Max Born and David Hilbert. His Ph.D. was from the University of Munich, following which, he joined Max Born at the University of Göttingen. In 1924 he began work on quantum mechanics with Niels Bohr, at the University of Copenhagen, where in 1926 he was given a Lecturership in Theoretical Physics. In 1927 he took the chair in theoretical physics at Leipzig. He won the Nobel Prize in 1932 for his work on quantum mechanics. In 1937 he married Elizabeth Schumacher.
He elected to remain in Germany during the Second World War, despite problems with the Nazi government. His wartime work is discussed in a separate section below. In 1941 he was appointed Professor of Physics at the University of Berlin. At the end of the Second World War he, and other German physicists, were captured by allied troops as part of Operation Alsos which targeted the capture of Axis nuclear scientists, which was part of a wider effort to capture the Axis powers' scientists for the military application of their knowledge in the looming Cold War.
After the end of WWII, Heisenberg toured various countries giving lectures including England, the United States and Scotland before moving to work in Munich at the Max Planck Institute for Physics. In 1955-56 he gave the Gifford Lectures at St. Andrews University, which resulted in the book Physics and Philosophy.
In 1957 Heisenberg together with Otto Hahn, Max von Laue, Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker and Max Born formulated and signed a protest against nuclear arming of the German Armed Forces and world-wide nuclear armaments, the so-called "Göttingen Declaration of the German Nuclear Physicists".
He died on February 1, 1976.
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As a student, he met Niels Bohr in Göttingen in 1922. A fruitful collaboration developed between the two.
He invented matrix mechanics, the first formalization of quantum mechanics in 1925. His uncertainty principle, discovered in 1927, states that the simultaneous determination of both the position and momentum of a particle each has an inherent uncertainty, the product of these being not less than a known constant. Together with Bohr, he would go on to formulate the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics.
He received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1932 "for the creation of quantum mechanics, the application of which has, inter alia, led to the discovery of the allotropic forms of hydrogen".
During the early days of the Nazi regime in Germany, Heisenberg was harassed as a "White Jew" for teaching the theories of Albert Einstein in contrast with the Nazi-sanctioned Deutsche Physik movement. After a character investigation that Heisenberg himself instigated and passed, SS chief Heinrich Himmler banned any further political attacks on the physicist.
Hunger I want it so bad I can taste it.
it drives me mad to see it wasted,
when I need it so bad that it's burning me.
I'm hungry!