Eugène Bloch | |
---|---|
Born | 1878 |
Died | 1944 65–66) Auschwitz concentration camp, Poland | (aged
Nationality | French |
Occupations |
Eugène Bloch (10 June 1878 – 1944) was a French physicist and professor at the École Normale Supérieure, and at the Faculty of Science of the University of Paris.[1][2]
Early life and education
Eugène Bloch was born on 10 June 1878 in Soultz-Haut-Rhin, Alsace-Lorraine, in the German Empire. His father, an industrialist in the textile industry, sold his Alsatian factory and settled in Paris to give his two sons Leon and Eugène a French education. Eugene studied from 1897 to 1900 at the École Normale Supérieure, where he studied the physics of Jules Violle, Marcel Brillouin, and Henri Abraham, and at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Paris, where he attended the courses of Gabriel Lippmann and Edmond Bouty and obtained degrees in physics and mathematical sciences in 1899.
After having obtained the highest score in the aggregation examination, he taught at the physics laboratory of the École Normale Supérieure while preparing his Ph.D. in Physical Science on ionization in phosphorescence which he defended at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Paris in 1904.
Career and works
In 1906 Eugène Bloch became professor of physics in the special mathematics class at the Saint-Louis secondary school in Paris, where he taught for eleven years. In addition to his teaching, Eugène Bloch also carried out research in the physics laboratory of the École Normale Supérieure on the photoelectric effect and spectroscopy.
In 1908 Bloch completed the studies that he had pursued following his thesis and devoted himself to studying the photoelectric effect (discovered by Hertz in 1887 and then studied by Lenard around 1902). Unlike Lenard, Bloch understood the importance of distinguishing various colors, or wavelengths of light, instead of using white light. His experiments helped to support the interpretation given by Einstein in 1905.
In 1925 he developed the first spectrograph with a concave, reflective, and vacuum network which worked in the far ultra-violet up to wavelengths of up to 20 nm. The tables of wavelengths established with this apparatus on 30 chemical elements, and their variously charged ions, are still in use.
In 1940 Eugène Bloch was dismissed from his professorship following the anti-Jewish laws of the Vichy government and had to leave the École Normale Superieure. He was succeeded by Georges Bruhat. Bloch passed clandestinely to the "free zone", and worked in a laboratory of the University of Lyon. This was formalized in 1941 as an official assignment of the newly formed French National Centre for Scientific Research. When the German army invaded the Free Zone in 1942, Eugène Bloch attempted unsuccessfully to flee to Switzerland. He then hid under a false identity in the mountains of Savoy. The Gestapo found and arrested him at Allevard on 24 January 1944. He was deported from Bobigny station by Convoy no. 69 of 7 March 1944[3] and was murdered at the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Publications
- Théorie cinétique des gaz, éditeur Armand Colin 1921.
- Phénomènes Thermoioniques, éditions du Journal de Physique 1921.
- Enregistrement des signaux de TSF , 1921.
- L'ancienne et la nouvelle théorie des quanta, éditions Hermann, 1930.
See also
References
- ↑ About Eugene Bloch on the École Normale Supérieure website
- ↑ Freudenthal, Gad, ed. (1990). Etudes Sur – Studies on Helene Metzger (in French) (reprint ed.). Netherlands: E.J. Brill. p. 82. ISBN 978-90-04-09210-5.
- ↑ Voir, Klarsfeld, 1978.
- Serge Klarsfeld. Le Mémorial de la Déportation des Juifs de France. Beate et Serge Klarsfeld: Paris, 1978.
- Freddy Raphaël et Robert Weyl, "Eugène Bloch," in Nouveau dictionnaire de biographie alsacienne, vol. 4, p. 256
- Paul Langevin, Remarques à propos de la communication de M. Eugène Bloch, 1905.
- Les Trois Physiciens Henri Abraham, Eugène Bloch, Georges Bruhat, éditions rue d'Ulm, 2009.