Kurt Mendelssohn AKA Kurt Alfred Georg Mendelssohn Born: 7-Jan-1906 Birthplace: Berlin, Germany Died: 18-Sep-1980 Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Male Religion: Jewish Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Mathematician, Physicist, Archaeologist Nationality: England Executive summary: Cryogenics and pyramids Physicist Kurt Mendelssohn fled the German Reich, installed the first helium liquifier at Oxford, and conducted important pre-WW2 work on superconductivity. He also wrote a popular book, The Quest for Absolute Zero, explaining low-temperature physics. He is better remembered for his extracurricular work as a pyramidologist, including his landmark estimate of the workforce necessary to construct the pyramids of Dahshur, Giza, and Med�m. He theorized that the third section of the Med�m Pyramid disastrously slipped and buried the workers constructing that pyramid beneath the rubble that surrounds Med�m, and that this tragedy led to the design alterations visible in the so-called Bent Pyramid of Dahshur. He studied under Frederick Lindemann and Walther Nernst, his students included Nicholas Kurti, and he was a great-great-grandson of Saul Mendelssohn, the younger brother of philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. Father: Ernst Moritz Mendelssohn Mother: Elisabeth Ruprecht Mendelssohn Wife: (married)
Teacher: Oxford University (1933-73)
Hughes Medal 1967 Royal Society Naturalized UK Citizen German Ancestry
Jewish Ancestry
Author of books:
Progress in Cryogenics (1959) The Quest for Absolute Zero: The Meaning of Low Temperature Physics (1966) Cryogenic Engineering: Present Status and Future Development (1968) The Riddle of the Pyramids (1974) The Secret of Western Domination (1976) Cryophysics (1983)
Requires Flash 7+ and Javascript.
Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile
Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications
|