List of TU Braunschweig People - Natural Sciences and Mathematics

Natural Sciences and Mathematics

  • Ewald Banse — Geography
  • Ernst Otto Beckmann — Chemistry
  • August Wilhelm Heinrich Blasius — Zoology and Botany
  • Johann Heinrich Blasius — Zoology
  • Caesar Rudolf Boettger — Zoology
  • Lorenz Florenz Friedrich von Crell — Chemistry and Metallurgy
  • Julius Wilhelm Richard Dedekind — Mathematics
  • Carl Georg Oscar Drude — Botany
  • Manfred Eigen — Biophysical chemistry — Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1967
  • Herbert Freundlich — Chemistry
  • Karl Theophil Fries — Chemistry
  • Gustav Gassner — Botany
  • Carl Friedrich Gauß — Mathematics
  • Wolfgang Hahn — Mathematics
  • Johann Christian Ludwig Hellwig — Entomology
  • Nikolaus Hofreiter — Mathematics
  • Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger — Zoology
  • Henning Kagermann — Physics
  • Klaus von Klitzing — Physics — Nobel Prize in Physics 1985
  • August Wilhelm Knoch — Physics
  • William F. Martin — Botany
  • Agnes Pockels — Chemistry
  • Friedrich Carl Alwin Pockels — Physics
  • Vijay Kanth Ponnada — Computational Sciences in Engineering
  • Ferdinand Schneider — Chemistry
  • Gerhard Schrader — Chemistry
  • Hans Sommer — Mathematics
  • Ferdinand Tiemann — Chemistry
  • Julius Tröger — Chemistry
  • Gerd Wedler — Chemistry
  • Christian Rudolph Wilhelm Wiedemann — Anatomy and Entomology
  • Georg Wittig — Chemistry — Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1979
  • Eberhard August Wilhelm von Zimmermann — Zoogeography

Read more about this topic:  List Of TU Braunschweig People

Famous quotes containing the words natural, sciences and/or mathematics:

    If the most significant characteristic of man is the complex of biological needs he shares with all members of his species, then the best lives for the writer to observe are those in which the role of natural necessity is clearest, namely, the lives of the very poor.
    —W.H. (Wystan Hugh)

    Letting a hundred flowers blossom and a hundred schools of thought contend is the policy for promoting the progress of the arts and the sciences and a flourishing culture in our land.
    Mao Zedong (1893–1976)

    Why does man freeze to death trying to reach the North Pole? Why does man drive himself to suffer the steam and heat of the Amazon? Why does he stagger his mind with the mathematics of the sky? Once the question mark has arisen in the human brain the answer must be found, if it takes a hundred years. A thousand years.
    Walter Reisch (1903–1963)