Julius Plücker
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Julius Plücker (16 June 1801 – 22 May 1868) was a German
mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, mathematical structure, structure, space, Mathematica ...
and
physicist A physicist is a scientist who specializes in the field of physics, which encompasses the interactions of matter and energy at all length and time scales in the physical universe. Physicists generally are interested in the root or ultimate ca ...
. He made fundamental contributions to the field of analytical geometry and was a pioneer in the investigations of cathode rays that led eventually to the discovery of the electron. He also vastly extended the study of Lamé curves.


Biography


Early years

Plücker was born at Elberfeld (now part of Wuppertal). After being educated at Düsseldorf and at the universities of
Bonn The federal city of Bonn ( lat, Bonna) is a city on the banks of the Rhine in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, with a population of over 300,000. About south-southeast of Cologne, Bonn is in the southernmost part of the Rhine-Ru ...
, Heidelberg and Berlin he went to Paris in 1823, where he came under the influence of the great school of French geometers, whose founder, Gaspard Monge, had only recently died. In 1825 he returned to Bonn, and in 1828 was made professor of mathematics. In the same year he published the first volume of his ''Analytisch-geometrische Entwicklungen'', which introduced the method of "abridged notation". In 1831 he published the second volume, in which he clearly established on a firm and independent basis projective duality.


Career

In 1836, Plücker was made professor of physics at University of Bonn. In 1858, after a year of working with vacuum tubes of his Bonn colleague
Heinrich Geißler Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Geißler (26 May 1814 in Igelshieb – 24 January 1879) was a skilled glassblower and physicist, famous for his invention of the Geissler tube, made of glass and used as a low pressure gas-discharge tube. Geissler desce ...
, he published his first classical researches on the action of the magnet on the electric discharge in rarefied gases. He found that the discharge caused a fluorescent glow to form on the glass walls of the vacuum tube, and that the glow could be made to shift by applying an electromagnet to the tube, thus creating a magnetic field. It was later shown that the glow was produced by cathode rays. Plücker, first by himself and afterwards in conjunction with
Johann Hittorf Johann Wilhelm Hittorf (27 March 1824 – 28 November 1914) was a German physicist who was born in Bonn and died in Münster, Germany. Hittorf was the first to compute the electricity-carrying capacity of charged atoms and molecules (ions), an ...
, made many important discoveries in the spectroscopy of gases. He was the first to use the vacuum tube with the capillary part now called a Geissler tube, by means of which the luminous intensity of feeble electric discharges was raised sufficiently to allow of spectroscopic investigation. He anticipated Robert Wilhelm Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff in announcing that the lines of the spectrum were characteristic of the chemical substance which emitted them, and in indicating the value of this discovery in chemical analysis. According to Hittorf, he was the first who saw the three lines of the hydrogen spectrum, which a few months after his death, were recognized in the spectrum of the solar protuberances. In 1865, Plücker returned to the field of geometry and invented what was known as '' line geometry'' in the nineteenth century. In projective geometry, Plücker coordinates refer to a set of homogeneous co-ordinates introduced initially to embed the space of lines in projective space \mathbf^3 as a quadric in \mathbf^5. The construction uses 2×2 minor determinants, or equivalently the second exterior power of the underlying vector space of dimension 4. It is now part of the theory of Grassmannians \mathbf(k, V) ( k -dimensional subspaces of an n-dimensional vector space V), to which the generalization of these co-ordinates to k \times k minors of the n \times k matrix of homogeneous coordinates, also known as Plücker coordinates, apply. The embedding of the Grassmannian \mathbf(k, V) into the projectivization \mathbf(\Lambda^k(V)) of the kth exterior power of V is known as the
Plücker embedding In mathematics, the Plücker map embeds the Grassmannian \mathbf(k,V), whose elements are ''k''-dimensional subspaces of an ''n''-dimensional vector space ''V'', in a projective space, thereby realizing it as an algebraic variety. More precisely ...
.


Bibliography

* 1828
''Analytisch-Geometrische Entwicklungen''
from
Internet Archive The Internet Archive is an American digital library with the stated mission of "universal access to all knowledge". It provides free public access to collections of digitized materials, including websites, software applications/games, music ...
* 1835
''System der analytischen Geometrie, auf neue Betrachtungsweisen gegründet, und insbesondere eine ausführliche Theorie der Kurven dritter Ordnung enthaltend''
* 1839
''Theorie der algebraischen Curven, gegründet auf eine neue Behandlungsweise der analytischen Geometrie''
* 1846
''System der Geometrie des Raumes in neuer analytischer Behandlungsweise, insbesondere die Theorie der Flächen zweiter Ordnung und Classe enthaltend''
* 1852
''System der Geometrie des Raumes in neuer analytischer Behandlungsweise, insbesondere die Theorie der Flächen zweiter Ordnung und Classe enthaltend. Zweite wohlfeilere Auflage''
* 1865
On a New Geometry of Space
''Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society'' 14: 53–8 * 1868: Neue Geometrie des Raumes gegründet auf die Betrachtung der geraden Linie als Raumelement. Erste Abtheilung. Leipzig. * 1869: Neue Geometrie des Raumes gegründet auf die Betrachtung der geraden Linie als Raumelement. Zweite Abtheilung. Ed. F. Klein. Leipzig. * 1895–1896: ''Gesammelte Wissenschaftliche Abhandlungen'', Band 1 (vol. 1), Mathematische Abhandlungen (edited by Arthur Moritz Schoenflies & Friedrich Pockels), Teubner 1895
Archive
Band 2 (vol. 2), Physikalische Abhandlungen (edited by Friedrich Pockels), 1896
Archive


Awards

Plücker was the recipient of the Copley Medal from the
Royal Society The Royal Society, formally The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge, is a learned society and the United Kingdom's national academy of sciences. The society fulfils a number of roles: promoting science and its benefits, r ...
in 1866.


See also

* Birkeland–Eyde process * Duality (projective geometry) * Grassmannian * Ion pump * Parameter space * Timeline of low-temperature technology


References


Bibliography

* Born, Heinrich, ''Die Stadt Elberfeld. Festschrift zur Dreihundert-Feier 1910''. J.H. Born, Elberfeld 1910 * Giermann, Heiko, Stammfolge der Familie Plücker, in: Deutsches Geschlechterbuch, 217. Bd, A. Starke Verlag, Limburg a.d.L. 2004 * Strutz, Edmund, ''Die Ahnentafeln der Elberfelder Bürgermeister und Stadtrichter 1708–1808''. 2. Auflage, Verlag Degener & Co., Neustadt an der Aisch 1963 *


External links

*
The Cathode Ray Tube site
* * *
''Julius Plücker in der philosophischen Fakultät der Universität Halle''
(
PDF Portable Document Format (PDF), standardized as ISO 32000, is a file format developed by Adobe in 1992 to present documents, including text formatting and images, in a manner independent of application software, hardware, and operating systems. ...
)
Julius Plücker und die Stammfolge der Familie Plücker, Deutsches Geschlechterbuch, 217. Bd., A. Starke Verlag, Limburg a.d.L. 2004
(Word)
uni-bonn.de
„Ein streitbarer Gelehrter im 19. Jahrhundert. Der Mathematiker Julius Plücker starb vor 140 Jahren.“ Pressemitteilung der Universität Bonn vom 21. Mai 2008
"Discussion of the general form for light waves"
(English translation) {{DEFAULTSORT:Plucker, Julius 1801 births 1868 deaths 19th-century German mathematicians 19th-century German physicists Recipients of the Copley Medal People from Elberfeld People from the Rhine Province University of Bonn faculty Foreign Members of the Royal Society Scientists from Wuppertal