List of German inventors and discoverers

{{Short description|none}}

{{Ambox|fix=Before adding more names, please read the Criteria for inclusion section on the article's Talk page.}}

This is a list of German inventors and discoverers. The following list comprises people from Germany or German-speaking Europe, and also people of predominantly German heritage, in alphabetical order of the surname.

align=center

! bgcolor=#dddddd align=left | Existing

| bgcolor=#dddddd | A

| bgcolor=#dddddd | B

| bgcolor=#dddddd | C

| bgcolor=#dddddd | D

| bgcolor=#dddddd | E

| bgcolor=#dddddd | F

| bgcolor=#dddddd | G

| bgcolor=#dddddd | H

| bgcolor=#dddddd |  I 

| bgcolor=#dddddd |  J 

| bgcolor=#dddddd | K

| bgcolor=#dddddd | L

| bgcolor=#dddddd | M

| bgcolor=#dddddd | N

| bgcolor=#dddddd | O

| bgcolor=#dddddd | P

| bgcolor=#dddddd | Q

| bgcolor=#dddddd | R

| bgcolor=#dddddd | S

| bgcolor=#dddddd | T

| bgcolor=#dddddd | U

| bgcolor=#dddddd | V

| bgcolor=#dddddd | W

| bgcolor=#dddddd | X

| bgcolor=#dddddd | Y

| bgcolor=#dddddd | Z

colspan=6 align=center bgcolor=#bbbbbb | See also

| colspan=6 align=center bgcolor=#bbbbbb | Notes

| colspan=6 align=center bgcolor=#bbbbbb | References

| colspan=10 align=center bgcolor=#bbbbbb | External links

A

File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-K0917-501, Prof. Manfred v. Ardenne.jpg in 1933]]

  • Ernst Abbe: Invented the first refractometer, and many other devices. Donated his shares in the company Carl Zeiss to form Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung, still in existence today.
  • Franz Carl Achard: Developed a process to produce sugar from sugar beet. Built the first factory for the process in 1802.
  • Robert Adler: Invented a better television remote control.
  • Konrad Adenauer: Invented soya sausage (1916; "Kölner Wurst")http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/biblio?locale=de_EP&CC=GB&NR=131402 Improvements in the Composition and Manufacture of Sausage Meat and the like; Patent and, together with Jean and Josef Oebel, [coarse] wholemeal bread (1917; Kölner Brot).http://depatisnet.dpma.de/DepatisNet/depatisnet?window=1&space=menu&content=treffer&action=pdf&docid=AT000000074310B&Cl=2&Bi=1&Ab=&De=2&Dr=&Pts=&Pa=&We=&Sr=&Eam=&Cor=&Aa=&so=desc&sf=vn&firstdoc=0&NrFaxPages=2&pdfpage=2 Patent; page 2
  • Georgius Agricola: Named "the father of mineralogy".
  • Wilhelm Albert: Invented the wire rope 1834.
  • Kurt Alder: Discovery of the Diels–Alder reaction, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1950.
  • Richard Altmann: Discovery of the Mitochondrion
  • Alois Alzheimer: Psychiatrist who discovered Alzheimer´s disease, a degeneration of the brain in old age.
  • Ottomar Anschütz: in 1883 he patented a camera with an internal roller blind shutter mechanism, just in front of the photographic plate. Thus the focal-plane shutter in modern recognizable form was born.
  • Hermann Anschütz-Kaempfe: Invented the gyrocompass in 1907.
  • Manfred von Ardenne: Self-taught researcher, applied physicist and inventor. Inventor of television among other things. 600 patents in fields including electron microscopy, medical technology, nuclear technology, plasma physics, and radio and television technology.
  • Leo Arons: Mercury-vapor lamp together with Peter Cooper Hewitt.
  • Carl Auer von Welsbach: Gas mantle
  • Leopold Auerbach: Discovery of Plexus myentericus Auerbachi, or Auerbach's plexus.
  • Max Abraham: Physicist. Worked as Max Planck's assistant for three years. Developed theories on electrons.

B

File:Adolf von Baeyer (1905).jpg]]

File:Behaims Erdapfel.jpgs Globe 1493]]

File:Benz Patent Motorwagen 1886 (Replica).jpg built in 1885]]

File:Me 262 flight show at ILA 2006 (cropped).jpg, instrumental in the development of the Me 262.]]

File:S-IC engines and Von Braun.jpg]]

File:Robert Bunsen 02.jpg]]

File:Carl von Clausewitz.PNG, father of modern military theory.]]

  • Walter Baade: astronom, discovered together with Fritz Zwicky, he identified supernovae as a new category of astronomical objects
  • Karl Ernst von Baer: discovered mammal ovum.
  • Ralph Baer: Inventor of the first home video game console.
  • Adolf von Baeyer: Chemist. Synthesized indigo, discovered the phthalein dyes, and investigated polyacetylenes, oxonium salts, nitroso compounds (1869) and uric acid derivatives (1860 and onwards) including the discovery of barbituric acid (1864). Nobel laureate 1905.
  • Albert Ballin: Father of modern cruise ship travel
  • Heinrich Band: Developed a musical instrument and called it bandoneón in 1846. It is used in most tango orchestras until today.
  • Heinrich Barkhausen: Discovered what is now called the Barkhausen effect, to describe the phenomenon, which is caused by rapid changes of size of magnetic domains in 1919, and Barkhausen stability criterion.
  • Oskar Barnack: The father of the first mass marketed 35mm camera and Leica.
  • Heinrich Anton de Bary: Father of Phytopathology, the science of plant diseases and modern Mycology. Coined the word symbiosis in 1879.
  • Karl Adolph von Basedow: Discovery and description of Graves-Basedow disease
  • Wilhelm Bauer: Inventor and engineer, who built several hand-powered submarines.
  • Eugen Baumann: He was one of the first people to create polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and, together with Carl Schotten, he discovered the Schotten-Baumann reaction.
  • Carl Baunscheidt: Inventor of the Lebenswecker ("life awakener") or "artificial leech".
  • Hans Beck: Inventor of the toy Playmobil.
  • Georg Bednorz: Physicist, discovered high-temperature superconductivity in ceramics, shared the 1987 Nobel Prize in Physics.
  • Martin Behaim: Inventor of the first globe of the world (Erdapfel) between 1491 and 1493.
  • Alexander Behm: Inventor of echo sounding. The patent was granted in 1913.
  • Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen: Navigator and Explorer. Discovered the land mass of Antarctica on January 28, 1820.
  • Friedrich Bessel: astronom, he is credited with being the first to use parallax in calculating the distance to a star.
  • Hans Bethe: Nuclear physicist and Nobel laureate in physics 1967. During World War II, he was head of the Theoretical Division at the secret Los Alamos laboratory which developed the first atomic bombs.
  • Emil Adolf von Behring: Discovered the diphtheria antitoxin. It was the world's first cure for a disease (1891).John M. Barry, The Great Influenza; The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History (New York: Penguin Books, 2005) 70. He was awarded history's first Nobel Prize in Physiology of Medicine in 1901.
  • Melitta Bentz: Inventor of the coffee filter, 1908.
  • Karl Benz: Father and inventor of the gasoline-powered automobile, 1885, and pioneering founder of automobile manufacturing.
  • Albrecht Berblinger: Inventor of the spring prosthesis and hang-glider (1811).Albrecht Ludwig Berblinger (1770-1829), known as the "Flying Tailor of Ulm", started with flight experiments in Ulm, Germany, in the early 19th century. He gained experience in downhill gliding with a maneuverable airworthy semi-rigid hang-glider and then attempted to cross the Danube River at Ulm's Eagle's Bastion on 31 May 1811. The tricky local winds caused him to crash and he was rescued by fishermen, making him the first survivor of a water immersion accident of a heavier-than-air manned "flight machine". Though he failed in his attempt to be the first man to fly, Berblinger can be regarded as one of the significant aviation pioneers who applied the "heavier than air" principle and paved the way for the more effective glide-flights of Otto Lilienthal (1891) and the Wright Brothers (1902). Less known are Berblinger's significant contributions to the construction of artificial limbs for medical use, as well as the spring-application in aviation. His invention of a special mechanical joint was also used for the juncture of the wings of his "flying machine". Because of his worthwhile contributions to medicine and flight, in 1993 the German Academy of Aviation Medicine named an annual award for young scientists in the field of aerospace medicine in his honor.
  • Hans Berger: a German neurologist, best known as the inventor of electroencephalography (EEG) (the recording of "brain waves") in 1924, coining the name, and the discoverer of the alpha wave rhythm known as "Berger's wave"
  • Emil Berliner: He is best known for developing the microphone and disc record gramophone.
  • Albert Betz: Betz's law, 1913
  • Gerd Binnig: Physicist. Design of the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) with Heinrich Rohrer. Nobel laureate 1986.
  • Ludwig Blattner: developed the Blattnerphone, the first magnetic tape recorder (using steel tape) whilst working in Britain in the late 1920s.[http://www.orbem.co.uk/tapes/blattner.htm "Blattnerphone"], Orbem.co.uk, retrieved 07 February 2014
  • Max Bockmühl: He developed together with German Gustav Ehrhart Methadone in 1937 in Germany, working for I.G. Farbenindustrie AG at the Farbwerke Hoechst
  • Johann Elert Bode: Discovered the Titus-Bode Law
  • Ludwig Bölkow: Aeronautical pioneer. Was instrumental in the development of the Me 262, developed a new rotorhead concept for helicopters.
  • Max Born: Physicist and mathematician. Groundbreaking work in quantum mechanics. Nobel laureate 1954 with Walther Bothe. His Ph.D. student Delbrück, and six of his assistants (Fermi, Heisenberg, Goeppert-Mayer, Herzberg, Pauli, Wigner) went on to win Nobel Prizes. His Ph.D. student J. Robert Oppenheimer led the project to develop the atomic bomb.
  • Manfred Börner: Physicist. Developed the first working fiber-optical data transmission system in 1965. Received a patent for an "electro-optical transmission system utilizing lasers".
  • Carl Bosch: Chemist and Nobel laureate, discovered the processes of industrial high pressure chemistry.
  • Robert Bosch: He invented, engineered and launched various innovations for the motor vehicle.
  • Walther Bothe: Nuclear physicist, who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954 with Max Born.
  • Johann Friedrich Böttger: He was generally acknowledged as the inventor of European porcelain although more recent sources ascribe this to Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus. Böttger is still credited with developing the manufacture of porcelain in Europe.
  • Karlheinz Brandenburg: Inventor and audio engineer; father of audio compression format MPEG Audio Layer 3, more commonly known as MP3.
  • Karl Ferdinand Braun: Inventor of the CRT oscilloscope in 1897
  • Wernher von Braun: The preeminent rocket engineer of the 20th century. Developed the V-2 rocket for Germany. Built Saturn V rocket in USA which put man on the moon.
  • Korbinian Brodmann: neurologist, Brodmann area in brain
  • Walter Bruch: PAL, colour encoding system for analogue television
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Gustav Bruhn: inventor of Taximeter
  • Ernst Büchner: Chemist and inventor of Büchner flask and Büchner funnel.
  • Robert Bunsen: Chemist who developed the Bunsen burner, and with Gustav Kirchhoff he discovered caesium (1860) and rubidium (1861).
  • Wilhelm Busch: Caricaturist, painter and poet; father of comics.
  • Christian Friedrich Ludwig Buschmann: Pioneer and promoter of the harmonica.
  • Adolf Busemann: Discovered the effect of swept wing for modern aircraft in 1935.
  • Adolf Butenandt: Discovered primary female sex hormones. Shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Leopold Ruzicka in 1939.

C

D

File:gottliebdaimler1.jpg, co-founder of Mercedes-Benz]]

File:Caroline Eichler - Johann Georg Weinhold 2.jpg]]

E

File:Einstein1921 by F Schmutzer 4.jpg in 1921, the year he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics]]

F

File:Hermann Emil Fischer c1895.jpg]]

G

File:Hans geiger.jpg]]

File:Fagus Gropius Hauptgebaeude 200705 wiki front.jpg, designed by Walter Gropius and Adolf Mayer]]

  • Hermann Ganswindt: Inventor and spaceflight scientist, whose inventions (such as the dirigible, the helicopter, and the internal combustion engine) are thought to have been ahead of his time.
  • Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss: German mathematician and physical scientist who contributed significantly to many fields, including number theory, statistics, analysis, differential geometry, geodesy, geophysics, electrostatics, astronomy and optics. Sometimes referred to as "the Prince of Mathematicians".
  • Hans Geiger: Inventor of the Geiger–Müller counter in 1928. It detects the emission of nuclear radiation through the ionization produced in a low-pressure gas in a Geiger–Müller tube. Further improved by Walther Müller.
  • Heinrich Geißler: Inventor of the Geissler tube.
  • Reinhard Genzel: Astrophysicist, he and his group were the first to track the motions of stars at the centre of the Milky Way and show that they were orbiting a very massive object, probably a supermassive black hole.
  • Walter Gerlach: Physicist who co-discovered spin quantization in a magnetic field, the Stern–Gerlach effect.
  • Edmund Germer: Inventor of the neon lamp (Neonlampe).
  • Max Giese: Inventor of the first concrete pump in 1928.
  • Heinrich Göbel: Inventor of Hemmer for Sewing Machines, 1865,[http://www.pat2pdf.org/pat2pdf/foo.pl?number=47632 Goebel's patent 47.632 "Hemmer for Sewing Machines"] Vacuum Pump (Improvement of the Geissler-System of vacuum pumps, 1881[http://www.pat2pdf.org/pat2pdf/foo.pl?number=252658 Goebel's patent 252658 "Vacuum Pump" ] and Electric Incandescent Lamp (sockets to connect the filament of carbon and the conducting wires), 1882[http://www.pat2pdf.org/pat2pdf/foo.pl?number=266358 Goebel's patent 266358 "Electric Incandescent Lamp"]
  • Kurt Gödel: Important discoveries in math and logic, such as the incompleteness theorems

File:Johannes Gutenberg.jpg in a 16th-century copper engraving]]

H

File:Otto Hahn (Nobel).jpg, the first man to split the atomic nucleus]]

File:Felix Hoffman.jpg]]

File:Stieler, Joseph Karl - Alexander von Humboldt - 1843.jpg]]

I

  • Otmar Issing: Economist who invented the "pepet pillar" decision algorithm now used by the ECB.

J

K

File:JKepler.jpg]]

File:Robert Koch berlin.jpg on his name square in Berlin.]]

File:otto-lilienthal.jpg]]

L

File:Me 163 Glider LH.jpg Replica designed by Alexander Lippisch.]]

M

File:Marx3.jpg]]

File:Walther Nernst SI.jpg, Nobel laureate]]

N

File:Hermann Oberth 1950s.jpg]]

O

P

File:Max Planck Nobel 1918.jpg]]

Q

  • Georg Hermann Quincke: German physicist who invented the Quincke's Interference Tube, an apparatus which demonstrates destructive interference of sound waves.

R

File:JPReis.jpg]]

File:Paul Julius Reuter 1869.jpg aged 53 years (1869) by artist Rudolf Lehmann]]

S

File:First medical X-ray by Wilhelm Röntgen of his wife Anna Bertha Ludwig's hand - 18951222.jpg's first "medical" x-ray, of his wife's hand, taken on 22 December 1895 and presented to Professor Ludwig Zehnder of the Physik Institut, University of Freiburg, on 1 January 1896]]

File:Schott Duran glassware.jpg

T

U

  • Dietrich "Diedrich" Uhlhorn: Engineer, mechanic and inventor, who invented the first mechanical tachometer (1817), between 1817 and 1830 inventor of the Presse Monétaire (level coin press known as Uhlhorn Press) which bears his name.

V

File:Rudolf Virchow NLM3.jpg]]

  • Abraham Vater: Professor of anatomy; Ampulla of Vater.
  • Richard Vetter: Developed the most fuel efficient condensing boiler for heating systems in 1980. Used in many houses in Europe.
  • Rudolf Virchow: "Father of modern pathology"; numerous discoveries in the area of medicine.
  • Hans Vogt: Invented sound-on-film (idea 1905) together with Jo Engl and Joseph Massolle, first sound-on-film for the public on 17 September 1922 in Filmtheater Alhambra, Berlin, Germany.
  • Woldemar Voigt (often: Waldemar Voigt): Physicist, who taught at the Georg August University of Göttingen. He worked on crystal physics, thermodynamics and electro-optics. He discovered the Voigt effect in 1898.
  • Woldemar Voigt (engineer): Chief designer at Messerschmitt's Oberammergau offices and pioneer of the Me 163 and Me 264, project leader of the development of Me P. 1101, Me P. 1106, Me P. 1110, Me P. 1111, Me P. 1112 and Me P. 1116.{{cite book|last=Boyne|first=Walter J.|title=Messerschmitt Me 262: arrow to the future|year=1980|publisher=Smithsonian Institution Press|location=Washington, D.C.|isbn=978-0-87474-276-3|page=117 }}
  • Jacob Volhard: Chemist who discovered, together with his student Hugo Erdmann, the Volhard–Erdmann cyclization.

W

Image:DrehkolbenmotorDKM54.JPG

X

{{Empty section|date=July 2010}}

Y

File:Zuse Z1-2.jpg's Z1; replica in the German Museum of Technology in Berlin]]

{{Empty section||date=July 2010}}

Z

See also

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{Reflist}}