Bernhard Philberth

Bernhard Josef Philberth (26 March 1927 in Traunstein, Germany – 8 August 2010[1] in Melbourne) was an independent physicist, engineer, philosopher and since 1972 Roman Catholic priest.

Philberth was a member of the Academy of Science of Chieti/Italy, the Academy of Sciences of Besançon/France in which he was the first German to be accepted in 100 years, the Physical Society of Japan in Tokyo and the International Glaciological Society in London.

He was the originator of the 1960s project to investigate disposal of radioactive waste deep inside stable, inland ice sheets [1], [2] (presented by the French High Commissioner for Nuclear Energy) [3], [4]. His brother, Prof Karl Philberth headed the thermal drilling program of the International Glaciological Greenland Expedition (EGIG) as part of this project.[2]

In relativity physics Philberth discovered the "Zeitgradient" (FR: "gradient de temps"; EN: "time gradient") [5] (presented by Louis de Broglie) [6], and the relationship between the electromagnetic fundamental values [7].

Together with his brother he has been granted over a hundred patents for inventions in various areas of physics (inter alia "Philberth-Probe", "Philberth-Transformer") and is the author of numerous technical publications on nuclear energy, energy management and patent law.

Philberth was a promoter of environmental protection and was the initiator of the tenet to protect the environment by taxation laws [8] (submission to the Deutsche Bundestag resulting in change of oil tax laws) and the originator of taxation of lead in petrol [9] (law passed by the Deutsche Bundestag in 1984).

As firm believers in philanthropy, the Philberth brothers are founders of the "PH-Foundation" in the Philippines, sponsoring the education of youths from disadvantaged families (with over 2,000 graduates to date).

He died on 8 August 2010 due to pneumonia.

Books

Further publications

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 2010-09-02.
  2. "These Priests' Invention Could Help Us Drill Into Icy Alien Worlds Someday". WIRED. Retrieved 2015-10-21.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.