Philipp von Jolly
Johann Philipp Gustav von Jolly (26 September 1809 – 24 December 1884) was a German physicist and mathematician.
Born in Mannheim as the son of merchant Louis Jolly and Marie Eleonore Jolly, he studied science in Heidelberg, Vienna and Berlin. After his studies, he was appointed professor of mathematics in Heidelberg in 1839 and in physics in 1846. He moved to Munich in 1854 where he took the position once held by Georg Simon Ohm.[1] In 1854 he was knighted (and henceforth referred to as von Jolly).
Jolly was first and foremost an experimental physicist. He measured the acceleration due to gravity with precision weights and also worked on osmosis.
One of his students at the University of Munich was Max Planck, whom he advised in 1878 not to go into physics,[2] saying, "in this field, almost everything is already discovered, and all that remains is to fill a few unimportant holes." Planck replied that he didn't wish to discover new things, only to understand the known fundamentals of the field. Nevertheless, Planck's work opened up the field of quantum physics.
Jolly died in Munich.
See also
References
- Articles incorporating a citation from the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia with Wikisource reference
- German physicists
- German mathematicians
- Science teachers
- German knights
- Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich faculty
- Heidelberg University faculty
- 1809 births
- 1884 deaths
- People from Mannheim
- People from the Grand Duchy of Baden
- Heidelberg University alumni
- University of Vienna alumni
- Humboldt University of Berlin alumni