Max Planck (nonfiction)

From Gnomon Chronicles
Revision as of 15:58, 10 July 2017 by Admin (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Max Planck (1878).

Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck, FRS (/plɑːŋk/; 23 April 1858 – 4 October 1947) was a German theoretical physicist whose discovery of energy quanta won him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1918.

Planck made many contributions to theoretical physics, but his fame as a physicist rests primarily on his role as the originator of quantum theory, which revolutionized human understanding of atomic and subatomic processes. However, his name is also known on a broader academic basis, through the renaming in 1948 of the German scientific institution, the Kaiser Wilhelm Society (of which he was twice president), as the Max Planck Society (MPS).

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links: