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  1. Oct 21, 2024 · Erwin Schrödinger (born August 12, 1887, Vienna, Austria—died January 4, 1961, Vienna) was an Austrian theoretical physicist who contributed to the wave theory of matter and to other fundamentals of quantum mechanics. He shared the 1933 Nobel Prize for Physics with British physicist P.A.M. Dirac.

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  2. Aug 12, 2013 · Erwin Schrödinger. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1933. Born: 12 August 1887, Vienna, Austria. Died: 4 January 1961, Vienna, Austria. Affiliation at the time of the award: Berlin University, Berlin, Germany. Prize motivation: “for the discovery of new productive forms of atomic theory”. Prize share: 1/2.

  3. Following his work on quantum mechanics, Schrödinger devoted considerable effort to working on a unified field theory that would unite gravity, electromagnetism, and nuclear forces within the basic framework of general relativity, doing the work with an extended correspondence with Albert Einstein. [64]

  4. Apr 2, 2014 · Erwin Schrödinger was a Nobel Prize-winning Austrian physicist whose groundbreaking wave equation changed the face of quantum theory.

  5. Jan 22, 1999 · Eric's Treasure Trove. Schrödinger, Erwin (1887-1961) Austrian physicist who invented Wave Mechanics in 1926. Wave mechanics was an independent formulation of Quantum Mechanics, equivalent (but not obviously so) to Heisenberg's Matrix Mechanics.

  6. Schrödinger's speculations about how genetic information might be stored in molecules gave James Watson and Francis Crick the inspiration to research the gene which led to the discovery of the DNA double-helix structure.

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  8. His great discovery, Schrödinger’s wave equation, was made at the end of this epoch-during the first half of 1926. It came as a result of his dissatisfaction with the quantum condition in Bohr’s orbit theory and his belief that atomic spectra should really be determined by some kind of eigenvalue problem.

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