The convictions of Peter Debye
At the time of his death in 1966, Peter Debye was internationally renowned for his work on molecular structure, especially dipole moments (the interaction of a collection of charged particles with an electrical field) and the diffraction of X-rays and electrons in gases. For this work, he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1936. His name, Debye, is still used as the unit of measurement of a dipole moment.
Born in Maastricht in 1884, Debye was educated at the Aachen Institute of Technology and Munich University, where he received his Ph.D. in physics in 1908. Following appointments at Zurich University, Utrecht University, the University of G枚ttingen, and the University of Leipzig, Debye (in effect) replaced Albert Einstein as director of the Kaiser Wilhelm (now Max Planck) Institute for Physics in Berlin in 1934, serving until 1939. From 1937鈥1939, he was also president of the German Physical Society.
In 1939, he left his German positions and shortly afterwards emigrated to the United States, to join the faculty of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he taught until 1952. By the time he retired, he had become a colleague respected by many on the Cornell campus, and a mentor to a number of young chemists, many of them now prominent in their fields. He was also a Foreign Honorary Member of the 亚色影库app & Sciences, elected in 1927.
Given Debye鈥檚 reputation, the publication in January 2006 of Einstein in Nederland, by science writer Sybe Izaak Rispens, came as a shock to academic communities on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.
In Chapter Five of the book鈥揳nd in newspaper articles he wrote to promote it鈥揜ispens charged that Peter Debye, 鈥渙ne of the greatest Dutch scientists of the twentieth century,鈥 had contributed to 鈥淗itler鈥檚 most important military research program.鈥 Acknowledging that Debye was not a member of the Nazi Party, Rispens branded him an 鈥渆xtreme opportunist鈥 and 鈥渨illing helper of the regime鈥 whose 鈥渉ands are dirtier than is commonly assumed.鈥1 . . .