Oskar Benjamin Klein

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Oskar Benjamin Klein

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Stockholm, (A), Sweden
Death: February 05, 1977 (82)
Danderyd, (A), Sweden
Immediate Family:

Son of Rabbi Gottlieb Klein and Antonie Klein
Husband of Gerda Agnete Klein
Father of Elsbeth Deser; Private; Private; Private and Private
Brother of Walter Samuel Moritz Klein; Anna Lublin; Helena Klein; Ernst Immanuel Klein and Gustav Gottlieb Klein

Occupation: Fysiker. Professor.
Managed by: Christian Munk
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Oskar Benjamin Klein

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oskar Klein

Born September 15, 1894, Mörby, Sweden

Died February 5, 1977,Stockholm, Sweden

Residence Sweden and USA

Nationality Swedish

Ethnicity Jewish

Fields Physicist

Institutions Copenhagen, University of Michigan, Lund University,University College of Stockholm

Alma mater Nobel Institute, University College of Stockholm

Doctoral students David M. Dennison

Known for Kaluza-Klein theory, Klein-Gordon equation, Rydberg-Klein-Rees potentials

Influences Svante Arrhenius

Notable awards Max Planck medal, 1959

Oskar Benjamin Klein (September 15, 1894 - February 5, 1977) was a Swedish theoretical physicist.

Klein was born in Danderyd outside Stockholm, son of the chief rabbi of Stockholm, Dr. Gottlieb Klein and Antonie (Toni) Levy. He became a student of Svante Arrhenius at the Nobel Institute at a young age, and was on the way to Jean-Baptiste Perrin in France when World War I broke out and he was drafted into the military.

From 1917 he worked a few years with Niels Bohr in Copenhagen and received his doctoral degree at the University College of Stockholm (now Stockholm University) in 1921. In 1923 he received a professorship at University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and moved there with his recently wedded wife, Gerda Koch from Denmark. Klein returned to Copenhagen in 1925, spent some time with Paul Ehrenfest in Leiden, then became docent at Lund University in 1926 and in 1930 accepted the offer of the professorial chair in physics at the Stockholm University College, which had previously been held by Ivar Fredholm until his death in 1927; Klein retired as professor emeritus in 1962. He was awarded the Max Planck medal in 1959.

Klein is credited for inventing the idea, part of Kaluza-Klein theory, that extra dimensions may be physically real but curled up and very small, an idea essential to string theory / M-theory.

The Oskar Klein Memorial Lecture, held annually at the University of Stockholm, has been named after him.

Kilde:

MacTutor biography of Oskar Klein



Fysiker.

LVA nr 918

Referens:

In swedish and further links to other languages of Wikipedia

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Oskar Benjamin Klein's Timeline

1894
September 15, 1894
Stockholm, (A), Sweden
1925
June 28, 1925
Fødselsanstalten, Aarhus, Denmark
1977
February 5, 1977
Age 82
Danderyd, (A), Sweden