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Johann Jakob Balmer

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Johann Jakob Balmer
BornMay 1, 1825
DiedMarch 12, 1898(1898-03-12) (aged 72)
NationalitySwitzerland
Alma materUniversity of Basel
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics

Johann Jakob Balmer (May 1, 1825 – March 12, 1898) was a Swiss mathematician and mathematical physicist.

Biography

Balmer was born in Lausen, Switzerland, the son of a Chief Justice also named Johann Jakob Balmer. His mother was Elizabeth Rolle Balmer, and he was the oldest son. During his schooling he excelled in mathematics, and so decided to focus on that field when he attended university.

He studied at the University of Karlsruhe and the University of Berlin, then completed his Ph.D. from the University of Basel in 1849 with a dissertation on the cycloid. Johann then spent his entire life in Basel, where he taught at a school for girls. He also lectured at the University of Basel. In 1868 he married Christine Pauline Rinck at the age of 43. The couple had a total of six children.

Despite being a mathematician, he is not remembered for any work in that field; rather, his major contribution (made at the age of sixty, in 1885) was an empirical formula for the visible spectral lines of the hydrogen atom, the study of which he took up at the suggestion of Eduard Hagenbach also of Basel.[1] Using Ångström's measurements of the hydrogen lines, he arrived at a formula for computing the wavelength as follows:

for n = 2, h = 3.6456×10−7 m, and m = 3, 4, 5, 6, and so forth.

In his 1885 notice, he referred to h (now known as the Balmer constant) as the "fundamental number of hydrogen." Balmer then used this formula to predict the wavelength for m = 7 and Hagenbach informed him that Ångström had observed a line with wavelength 397 nm. Two of his colleagues, Hermann Wilhelm Vogel and William Huggins, were able to confirm the existence of other lines of the series for the spectrum of hydrogen of white stars.

Balmer's formula was later found to be a special case of the Rydberg formula, devised by Johannes Rydberg.

with being the Rydberg constant for hydrogen, for Balmer's formula, and .

A full explanation of why these formulas worked, however, had to wait until the presentation of the Bohr model of the atom by Niels Bohr in 1913.

Johann Balmer died in Basel.

Honors

References

  1. ^ Magie, William Francis (1969). A Source Book in Physics. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press. p 360

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