Heinrich von Wild

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Heinrich Wild I (1833-1902) was a Swiss meteorologist and physicist. He was born December 17, 1833, at Uster, (Canton Zurich), and was educated at Zurich, Königsberg, and Heidelberg. In 1858 he was appointed professor of physics and director of the observatory at Bern. In 1868 he was called to Saint Petersburg, where he completely reorganized the observatory and established a meteorological system throughout the Empire and founded the meteorological observatories at Pavlovsk and Irkutsk. Until his retirement in 1895 he remained in the service of the Russian government.

He invented the polaristrobometer - a form of saccharimeter - a polarization photometer, a magnetic theodolite, and various new optical methods for comparing measures of length. Many of his papers were published in the Annalem des physikalischen Observatoriums für Russland and the Neues Repertorium für Meteorologie, founded by himself in 1865 and 1869 respectively; and also in the Mitteilungen of the International Polar Commission, of which he was president (1882-83). He published, furthermore, the great work Temperaturverhältnisse des russischen Reichs (tables, atlas, etc., 1876; German and Russian). Wild died at Zurich, September 5, 1902.

[edit] Weblinks