Geerd Diercksen


Geerd Heinrich Friedrich Diercksen is a German theoretical chemist and a pioneer in computational chemistry. In 1963 he was awarded his PhD, supervised by Heinz-Werner Preuß at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt am Main, in 1973 he was awarded his habilitation in Chemistry by the Technische Universität München and in 1983 he was appointed professor. From 1965 to 2001 he worked as scientific staff at the Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik and since 2001 he works there as scientist emeritus.

Education

Geerd Diercksen graduated in spring 1956 at the Luther-Schule in Hannover. Directly afterwards he started to study chemistry, mathematics and physics at the Technische Hochschule Hannover and graduated in autumn 1961 in chemistry. His interest in Theoretical and Computational Chemistry was raised during a course held by Werner Fischer and firmly established by attending a Summer School organised by Per-Olov Löwdin in 1960 at Uppsala University.
After graduation in Hannover he started his PhD studies supervised by Heinz-Werner Preuß at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, and in autumn 1963 he was awarded his PhD. Directly afterwards he started post-doctoral work at Keele University supervised by Roy McWeeny. In spring 1965 he accepted an offer by Ludwig Biermann to join the Max-Planck-Institut für Physik und Astrophysik in Munich as Scientific Staff. In 1973 he was awarded Habilitation in Chemistry by the Technische Universität München and in 1983 he was appointed there Professor. Since his retirement in 2001 he is working at the MPA as Scientist emeritus.

Biography

At the Max-Planck-Institute Diercksen established a worldwide network of scientific cooperations. In particular, he provided many colleagues from Eastern Europe with the opportunity to work as guest researchers at the Max-Planck-Institute and to establish contact with colleagues from Western Europe, the Americas and Asia. He hosted nine Humboldt Research Fellows. With one of them, Tokuei Sako, he was connected for many years after his retirement by a close, successful cooperation. In addition he hosted five Humboldt Research Award Winners: Włodzimierz Kołos , Turgay Uzer, Michael Zerner, Josef Paldus and Enrico Clementi.
As Visiting Scientist he has spent one year each at the IBM Research Laboratories in San Jose, California, and at the Harvard College Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and six months at the Hokkaido University in Sapporo. As Research Award Winner of 5 partner organisations of the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation he has spend one year each at the University of Waterloo and at Queen's University in Kingston, ONT, at the University of São Paulo, and six month at the University of Tokyo. Within the framework of his scientific cooperations he has visited repeatedly up to several month partner institutions, among others in Brasil, Chile, Canada, Great Britain, India, Japan, Polen, Sweden, the Slovak Republic, Venezuela, Uruguay and the USA. In 1969 he started, jointly with Alain Veillard, the tri-annual Series of European Seminars on Computational Methods in Quantum Chemistry.
From 1985 to 2000 Diercksen served as Editor of Computer Physics Communications, from 2002 to 2009 as German Representative in the COST Technical Committee: Telecommunication, Information Science and Technology, from 2001 to 2005 as Chairmen of the Management Committee of the ICT COST Action 282 Knowledge Exploration in Science and Technology, and from 2002 to 2004 as Scientific Advisor of the Project IST-2001-37238 Open Computing GRID for Molecular Science and Engineering within the 5th EU Framework Programme
Diercksen is Member of the Deutsche Gesellschaft der Humboldtianer e.V. and of the Deutsche Gesellschaft der JSPS-Stipendiaten e.V..

Research areas

The research activities of Geerd Diercksen have been focused on the development and implementation of ab-initio methods and their application to the accurate and reliable calculation of the properties of few electron systems. The implemented methods include, among others, the Hartree-Fock method and a Configuration Interaction method based on the symmetric group. In his studies he used as well the Coupled Cluster and the Polarization Propagator methods. The list of his wide scientific interests has to be limited here to a few examples: Early investigations have addressed hydrogen bonding. The results have been summarized in his Habilitation Thesis. He has created the first video of the electron distribution change in the hydrogen bond formation of the water dimer. Jointly with Wolfgang Kraemer and Björn Roos he was the first to calculate the electron correlation energy of the hydrogen bond in the water dimer. Further subjects he has studied include ionisation potentials and photoelectron spectra of atoms and molecules, electric moments and polarizabilities and impact cross section of molecules. The study of impact cross sections has required the time-consuming calculation of potential energy hypersurfaces most often sampling more than 100 points of support. Some of these potential hypersurfaces have served many years as standard test case for new methods for the calculation of impact cross sections. His late work has focused on studying quantum systems in non-coulomb potentials, among others on the origin of the first Hund's rule in atoms and quantum dots. Parallel to his quantum chemical studies he has been interested in the design of intelligent software. Within this framework he has studied artificial neural networks and initiated the two projects mentioned above: Knowledge Exploration in Science and Technology and Open Computing GRID for Molecular Science and Engineering.

Awards

Geerd Diercksen has received the Gold Medal of the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia and was Research Award Winner of 5 partner organisations of the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation.

Publications

His research results have been documented in about 250 publications in refereed scientific journals. He has served as editor of the proceedings of 5 NATO Advanced Study Institutes.

Literature