Julius von Hann

Julius Ferdinand von Hann (23 March 1839 Wartberg ob der Aist near Linz – 1 October 1921 Vienna) was an Austrian meteorologist. He is seen as the father of modern meteorology.

Biography

He was educated at the gymnasium of Kremsmünster and then studied mathematics, chemistry and physics at the University of Vienna, then geology and paleontology under Eduard Suess and physical geography under Friedrich Simony. From 1865 to 1868, he was master at the Oberrealschule at Linz, and in 1865 was invited by Karl Jelinek to become the first editor of the Zeitschrift für Meteorologie. In 1877, he succeeded Jelinek as the director of the Meteorologische Zentralanstalt (Central Institute for Meteorology and Earth Magnetism) and was appointed professor of meteorology at the University of Vienna. In 1897, he retired as director and became professor of meteorology at the University of Graz, but returned to Vienna to fill the chair of professor of cosmic physics in 1900, where he remained until 1910. In 1912, he was made a foreign knight of the Prussian Ordre Pour le Mérite.

Hann window

In signal processing, the Hann window is a window function, called the Hann function, named after him by R. B. Blackman and John Tukey in "Particular Pairs of Windows," published in "The Measurement of Power Spectra, From the Point of View of Communications Engineering", New York: Dover, 1959, pp. 98–99.

In the aforementioned article, the use of the Hann window is called "hanning", e.g., "hanning" a signal is to apply the Hann window to it.

Works

He contributed many papers to the Sitzungsberichte der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften.

Notes

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