Pierre-Ernest Weiss

French physicist
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Born:
March 25, 1865, Mulhouse, Fr.
Died:
Oct. 24, 1940, Lyon (aged 75)

Pierre-Ernest Weiss (born March 25, 1865, Mulhouse, Fr.—died Oct. 24, 1940, Lyon) was a French physicist who investigated magnetism and determined the Weiss magneton unit of magnetic moment.

Weiss graduated (1887) at the head of his class from the Zürich Polytechnikum with a degree in mechanical engineering and was admitted to the École Normale Supérieure in Paris in 1888. He was named maître de conférences at the University of Rennes in 1895 and at the University of Lyons in 1899. In 1902 he became professor at the Zürich Polytechnikum, where Albert Einstein was a colleague. There he developed a great laboratory for magnetic research that attracted a number of well-known physicists. Assigned to the French Office of Inventions during World War I, he helped devise the Cotton–Weiss acoustical method of fixing enemy artillery positions. In 1919 he established a physics institute at the University of Strasbourg (France) that became a leading centre of magnetic research. He was elected to membership in the Paris Academy in 1926.

Weiss’s chief work was on ferromagnetism. Hypothesizing a molecular magnetic field acting on individual atomic magnetic moments, he was able to construct mathematical descriptions of ferromagnetic behaviour, including an explanation of such magnetocaloric phenomena as the Curie point. His theory succeeded also in predicting a discontinuity in the specific heat of a ferromagnetic substance at the Curie point and suggested that spontaneous magnetization could occur in such materials; the latter phenomenon was later found to occur in very small regions known as Weiss domains. His major published work was Le magnetisme (with G. Foex, 1926).

Michael Faraday (L) English physicist and chemist (electromagnetism) and John Frederic Daniell (R) British chemist and meteorologist who invented the Daniell cell.
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