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Why is Wolfgang Pauli famous?

Why is Wolfgang Pauli famous?

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Asked by K. Tanaka, Last updated: Nov 09, 2024

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Marielle Sabbag

Marielle Sabbag

Marielle Sabbag
Marielle Sabbag

Answered Feb 05, 2019

Wolfgang Pauli, or Wolfgang Erst Friedrich Pauli, was born in April 1900. Pauli was an Austrian born physicist and recipient of the 1945 Nobel Prize in Physics. Other than his theories, Pauli was also known for being a prodigy in his youth Having incredible skills in math and even Pauli was also self-taught as a physicist. He later became a professor in Theoretical Physics in 1937 at Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. In 1924, Pauli became famous for his discovery of the Pauli exclusion principle states that in an atom no two electrons can occupy the same quantum state at the same time.

Wolfgang Pauli, or Wolfgang Erst Friedrich Pauli, was born in April 1900. Pauli was an Austrian

Pauli also experimented on Heisenberg’s matrix theory. He was also known as quite a perfectionist, having sharp opinions on both works of his own, and others. He had famously quoted a work as “Not only is not right, but it is not wrong.” Throughout his later years, Pauli spent most of the time teaching and in his studies and was awarded the Max Planck Medal for his extraordinary achievements in theoretical theories until his death in 1958.

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Bobby Rickets

Bobby Rickets

Bobby Rickets
Bobby Rickets, Content Reviewer

Answered Jan 31, 2019

Pauli was famous for the same reasons as Einstein and he can be thought of as Einstein's successor. He was born in Austria and became a thinker of the highest calibre. At first his outstanding mathematical performances impressed, then he became well-known as a physicist although self taught.

Pauli was famous for the same reasons as Einstein and he can be thought of as Einstein's

He was lauded by other scientists including Einstein for his insightful scientific papers and articles especially on quantum physics. winner of The Nobel Prize in Physics 1945. This was for his 1925 discovery, termed the Pauli exclusion principle, which states that in an atom no two electrons can occupy the same quantum state simultaneously. Later he created a successful “school” of theoretical physics.

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