Wolfgang Gaede
Wolfgang Max Paul Gaede was a German physicist and pioneer of vacuum engineering.
Life
Gaede was born in Lehe, Bremerhaven, the son of Prussian Colonel Karl Gaede and Amalia, nee Renf. In 1897 he began studying medicine at the University of Freiburg, but he soon switched to the field of physics. In 1901 he wrote his doctoral thesis on changing the specific heat of metals with temperature. Subsequent research on the Volta effect in a vacuum was unsuccessful, as the pump technology could not create a sufficient vacuum for the investigations. This prompted Gaede to deal more closely with vacuum technology. He invented the rotating mercury pump for high vacuum, which he presented to his scientific colleagues in 1905 at a congress in Merano. Also in Freiburg im Breisgau, Gaede wrote his habilitation thesis on The external friction of gases in 1909.In 1913 he received a professorship at the University of Freiburg. In the following six years, he invented the momentum transfer pump and a mercury diffusion pump. In 1919, Gaede joined the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology as a professor of experimental physics, where he worked in the following research areas:
- Vacuum technology
- Radio and communications technology
- Process for obtaining pure hydrogen and mercury
- Exploration of lightning protection equipment
- Movement of liquids in a rotating hollow ring
A lifelong consultancy contract from 1906 with Leybold GmbH of Cologne allowed him to continue his research in his private laboratory in Karlsruhe and later in Munich. Among other things, he invented the gas ballast principle. Gaede owned almost 40 patents in Germany, and many others abroad. A call to return to the university in Karlsruhe after the end of the war did not reach Gaede.
Gaede died in Munich in 1945.
Honours and memorials
- Elliott Cresson Medal, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, 1909
- Duddell Medal and Prize, Physical Society of London, 1932
- A lecture hall of the Karlsruhe University, named in 1969
- Wolfgang-Gaede-Strasse, on the university grounds in Karlsruhe, named in 1993
- Gaedestraße in Cologne, beside Oerlikon Leybold Vacuum GmbH