Andreas von Ettingshausen

Andreas von Ettingshausen

Andreas Freiherr von Ettingshausen (1796–1878)
Born 25 November 1796
Heidelberg, Electorate of the Palatinate
Died 25 May 1878 (1878-05-26) (aged 81)
Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Residence Austria
Nationality German
Fields Physicist and mathematician
Institutions University of Innsbruck
University of Vienna
Vienna Polytechnic Institute
Alma mater University of Vienna
Academic advisors Ignaz Lindner[1]
Doctoral students Ernst Mach
Jožef Stefan
Viktor von Lang
Known for Electric machines

Andreas Freiherr von Ettingshausen (25 November 1796 – 25 May 1878) was a German mathematician and physicist.

Biography

Ettingshausen studied philosophy, thermodynamics, chemistry, computer science, and jurisprudence at the University of Vienna. In 1792, he joined the University of Vienna and taught mathematics and physics as an adjunct professor. In 1819 he became professor of physics at the University of Innsbruck and 1821 professor of higher mathematics at the University of Vienna. His lectures of that time marked a new era for the University of Vienna, and they were published in 1827 in 2 volumes. In 1834 Ettingshausen became the chair of physics.

Ettingshausen was the first to design an electromagnetic machine, which used the electrical induction for power generation. He promoted optics and wrote a textbook of physics. His method of lecturing was widely influential. In addition he wrote a book on combinatorial analysis (Vienna 1826). In 1866, he retired.

Among his lasting impacts in mathematics is the introduction of the notation for the binomial coefficient, which is the coefficient of xk in the expansion of the binomial (x+1)n and, more generally, the number of k-element subsets of an n-element set.[2]

References

  1. Andreas von Ettingshausen, Vorlesungen über die höhere Mathematik: Vorlesungen über die Analysis, Volume 1, Gerold, 1827, p. v.
  2. Nicholas J. Higham. Handbook of Writing for the Mathematical Sciences. Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. p. 25. ISBN 0-89871-420-6.
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