Gustav Robert Kirchhoff (12
March 1824 – 17 October 1887) was a German
physicist who contributed to the fundamental
understanding of electrical
circuits, spectroscopy, and the
emission of black-body radiation by
heated objects. He coined the term
"black body" radiation in 1862, and two
sets of independent concepts in both circuit theory and thermal
emission are named "
Kirchhoff's
laws" after him. The
Bunsen-Kirchhoff Award for
spectroscopy is named after him and his colleague,
Robert Bunsen.
Life and work
Gustav
Kirchhoff was born in Königsberg
, East Prussia, the son
of Friedrich Kirchhoff, a lawyer, and Johanna Henriette
Wittke. He graduated from the Albertus
University of Königsberg in
1847 where he attended the mathematico-physical seminar directed by
Franz Ernst Neumann and
Friedrich Julius Richelot. He
married Clara Richelot, the daughter of his mathematics professor
Richelot.
In the same year, they moved to Berlin
, where he
stayed until he received a professorship at Breslau
.
Kirchhoff formulated his
circuit laws, which are now
ubiquitous in
electrical
engineering, in 1845, while still a student. He completed this
study as a seminar exercise; it later became his doctoral
dissertation. He proposed his
law of thermal
radiation in 1859, and gave a proof in 1861.
He was called to the
University of
Heidelberg
in 1854, where he collaborated in spectroscopic
work with Robert Bunsen.
Together Kirchhoff and Bunsen discovered
caesium and
rubidium in
1861.
At
Heidelberg
he ran a mathematico-physical seminar, modelled on
Neumann's, with the mathematician Leo
Koenigsberger. Among those who attended this seminar
were
Arthur Schuster and
Sofia Kovalevskaya. In 1875 Kirchhoff
accepted the first chair specifically dedicated to
theoretical physics at Berlin.
In 1862 he was awarded the
Rumford
Medal for his researches on the fixed lines of the solar
spectrum, and on the inversion of the bright lines in the spectra
of artificial light.
He contributed greatly to the field of spectroscopy by formalizing
three laws that describe the
spectral composition of
light emitted by incandescent objects, building
substantially on the discoveries of
David
Alter and
Anders Jonas
Angstrom (see also:
spectrum
analysis)
Kirchhoff
died in 1887, and was buried in the St Matthäus Kirchhof Cemetery
in Schöneberg
, Berlin.
Kirchhoff's three laws of spectroscopy
- A hot solid object produces light with a continuous
spectrum.
- A hot tenuous gas produces light with spectral lines at discrete wavelengths (i.e. specific colors) which depend
on the energy levels of the atoms in the gas. (See also:
emission spectrum)
- A hot solid object surrounded by a cool tenuous gas (i.e.
cooler than the hot object) produces light with an almost
continuous spectrum which has gaps at discrete wavelengths
depending on the energy levels of the atoms in the gas. (See
also: absorption
spectrum)
Kirchhoff did not know about the existence of energy levels in
atoms.The existence of discrete spectral lines was later explained
by the
Bohr model of the atom, which
helped lead to
quantum
mechanics.
See also

Spectroscope of Kirchhoff and
Bunsen
References and notes
- Kirchhoff is buried only a few meters from the graves of the
Brothers
Grimm.
Further reading

Grave of Gustav Kirchhoff