Walter Franz

For the Minnesota politician, see Walter Franz (politician).

Walter Franz (8 April 1911 in Munich 16 February 1992 in Münster) was a theoretical physicist who independently discovered the Franz–Keldysh effect.

Franz was a student of Arnold Sommerfeld at the University of Munich. He was granted his Ph.D. in 1934.[1][2] In the preface to the book Optik, Sommerfeld cited him for “the most recent and particularly lucid treatment” of the vectorial generalization of Hauygens’ principle.[3]

With Adolf Kratzer, another student of Sommerfeld, Franz co-authored the book Transzendente Funktionen. An academic descendent of Franz, Ludwig Tewordt, is cited as having received his Ph.D. at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, in 1953.[4] The article in which Franz independently published the Franz-Keldysh effect was published in 1958.

Selected bibliography

Notes

  1. Walter Franz – Mathematics Genealogy Project. The title of his dissertation was Comptoneffekt am gebundenen Elektron.
  2. Institut für Theoretische Physik I - Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg 1934: München, Germany. This reference also cites his birth and death years.
  3. Arnold Sommerfeld, translated from the first German edition by Otto Laporte and Peter A. Moldauer Optics - Lectures on Theoretical Physics Volume IV (Academic Press, 1964), p. vi
  4. Walter Franz – Mathematics Genealogy Project.
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