Adriaan Fokker


Adriaan Daniël Fokker was a Dutch physicist and musicologist who worked in the fields of special relativity and statistical mechanics. He is the inventor of the Fokker organ, a 31-tone equal-tempered (31-TET) organ.

Early life and education

Adriaan Daniël Fokker was born on 17 August 1887 in Buitenzorg, Dutch East Indies, the son of Anthony Herman Gerard Fokker, president of the Batavia branch of the Netherlands Trading Society, and Susanna Alida der Kinderen. He was a cousin of the aircraft manufacturer Anthony Fokker. In 1894, his family returned to the Netherlands.
Fokker studied physics at Technische Hoogeschool Delft and Leiden University, where he received his Ph.D. under Hendrik Lorentz in 1913. In his thesis, he derived the Fokker–Planck equation along with Max Planck. He continued his studies with Albert Einstein at Zurich, Ernest Rutherford at Manchester, and W. H. Bragg at Leeds.

Career

In 1917, after his military service during World War I, Fokker returned to Leiden University as an assistant to Hendrik Lorentz and Paul Ehrenfest. In 1921, he became a physics teacher at the Gymnasium of Delft, and in 1923 was appointed Professor of Applied Physics at Technische Hoogeschool Delft. In 1928, he succeeded Lorentz as Curator of the Physical Cabinet at Teylers Museum in Haarlem, a position he held until his retirement in 1955.
Fokker made several contributions to special relativity, and some less well-known contributions to general relativity, particularly in the area of geodetic precession, the phenomena of precession of a freely falling gyroscope in a gravitational field. Also absorber theory of electrodynamics.
Fokker began to study music theory during the Second World War, when Leiden University was closed; partly this was due to a desire to convince the Nazis he would be of no use to the war effort, and partly it was a response to reading the work of Christiaan Huygens on the 31 equal temperament.
In 1938, Fokker – along with Dirk Coster and Otto Hahn – helped Austrian Jewish physicist Lise Meitner escape from Nazi-occupied Austria to the Netherlands. Historian Ruth Lewin Sime writes
They were unsuccessful in obtaining funding, but Fokker succeeded in getting official permission for Meitner to leave, although he was unable to telegraph that to her due to secrecy. She escaped barely in time to evade arrest.
The year 1942 consequently marked a turning point in his life; after then he wrote many pieces in 31-equal, which are notable for using the 7th harmonic as a consonant interval. He also made notable contributions to music theory, such as the Fokker periodicity block.
In 1949, Fokker became a Member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Fokker died on 24 September 1972 in Beekbergen at the age of 85.

Musical instruments

Fokker designed and had built a number of keyboard instruments capable of playing microtonal scales via a generalized keyboard. The best-known of these is his 31-tone equal-tempered organ, which was installed in Teyler's Museum in Haarlem in 1951. It is commonly called the Fokker organ. The Fokker organ is currently property of the Huygens-Fokker Foundation and it moved to the Bamzaal in Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ. Regularly concerts take place on this instrument in the Bamzaal.