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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Biography  



1.1  Education  





1.2  Career  





1.3  Spanish Civil War and exile  







2 Positions  





3 Works  





4 Notes  





5 References  





6 External links  














Blas Cabrera






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Blas Cabrera Felipe)

Blas Cabrera
Born

Blas Cabrera y Felipe


(1878-05-20)20 May 1878
Died1 August 1945(1945-08-01) (aged 67)
Mexico City, Mexico
Alma materUniversidad Central de Madrid
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics, magnetism
InstitutionsSpanish Royal Academy of Sciences, French Academy of Sciences Royal Spanish Academy, Menéndez Pelayo International University
Doctoral advisorSantiago Ramón y Cajal
Seat I of the Real Academia Española
In office
26 January 1936 – 1 August 1945
Preceded bySantiago Ramón y Cajal[a]
Succeeded byGerardo Diego

Blas Cabrera y Felipe (May 20, 1878 – August 1, 1945)[1] was a Spanish physicist. He worked in the domain of experimental physics with focus in the magnetic properties of matter. He is considered one of the greatest scientists of Spain and one of the founders of the study of physical sciences in his country.

Biography[edit]

Portrait of Blas Cabrera by Eulogia Merle

Education[edit]

Cabrera received his baccalaureateinLa Laguna (Tenerife, Spain). He then moved to Madrid where he began studying law, following family tradition. He met at that time Santiago Ramón y Cajal, who convinced him to abandon law and study science. He graduated from the Universidad Central de Madrid (present day Complutense University of Madrid) in Physics and Mathematics, earning a doctorate in Physics in 1901 with thesis Sobre la Variación Diurna de la Componente Horizontal del Viento written under the supervision of Santiago Ramón y Cajal.[2][3]

Career[edit]

He was an experimental physicist, and developed his interests mostly in the field of magnetic properties of matter, achieving a prominent position among the physicists of his era. In 1903 he participated in the foundation of the Spanish Society of Physics and Chemistry and the annals of that society. In 1905, he obtained the chair of Electricity and Magnetism in the Universidad Central. He married María Sánchez Real in 1909. In 1910, the Junta de Ampliación de Estudios created the Laboratorio de Investigaciones Físicas, of which Cabrera was appointed as director. The Laboratory had five lines of investigation: magnetochemistry, physical chemistry, electrochemistry, electroanalysis and spectroscopy, and contributed greatly to the research and development of physics in Spain. With a grant from the Junta de Ampliación de Estudios (1912), Cabrera visited several European research centers including the Physics Laboratory of the Politechnic of Zurich (directed by Pierre Weiss), in which he carried out experiments in magnetochemistry. He also visited the physics laboratories of the universities of Geneva and Heidelberg, and the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Paris.

On returning to Spain, Cabrera used the techniques he had learned during his European tour, especially those developed in the Zurich laboratory, to continue his research on magnetism, in collaboration with other researchers such as Enrique Moles Ormella and Arturo Duperier.

Cabrera's research work was prolific. Between 1910 and 1934 he published about 110 works (Pierre Weiss, then director of Strasbourg University's Physics Institute, commented in 1932 that among the 180 articles about magnetism present in the institute's library, 24 came from the Laboratorio de Investigaciones Físicas which Cabrera directed). He interpreted magnetization curves in terms of the Weiss magneton. He modified Curie-Weiss's law, which describes the magnetic susceptibility of a ferromagnetic material in the paramagnetic region beyond Curie point, and deduced an equation to describe an atom's magnetic moment taking into account the effect of temperature.

At the same time, he improved many experimental devices. He was the first scientist in Spain to use the methods of the theory of errors and of the least squares for the determination of physical constants. Some of his measures of magnetic susceptibility continue to be the most precise in existence.

However, his work was not solely investigation. He was also a great publisher and disseminator of modern theories of physics that were defined in the first thirty years of the 20th century. Thus, in 1912 he published an article in the magazine Real Academia de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales titled "Fundamental principles of vectorial analysis in three-dimensional space and in Minkowski space" ("Principios fundamentales del análisis vectorial en el espacio de tres dimensiones y en el Universo de Minkowski"). Along with the review published in 1912 by Esteban Terradas of Max von Laue's book Das Relativitätsprincip, which had appeared the previous year, these works were meant to introduce the special theory of relativity to Spain.

Cabrera's work was also recognized on an international level. Cabrera was host to Albert Einstein during his visit to Spain in 1923. In 1928 he became a member of the French Academy of Sciences, sponsored by physicists Paul Langevin and Maurice de Broglie. That year he received the greatest recognition of his whole career: at the request of Einstein and Marie Curie, Cabrera was named a member of the 6th Scientific Committee of the Solvay Conference. These conferences, held triannually, brought together the world's finest physicists. In the Solvay Conference of 1930, Cabrera participated with a paper titled "The magnetic properties of matter."

In 1929, Cabrera replaced Leonardo Torres Quevedo, who had abandoned his post due to health problems, at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures.In 1931 he was named director of the Universidad Central de Madrid. A year later, along with other scientists such as Miguel A. Catalán and his disciple, Julio Palacios, he pushed for the creation of the National Institute of Physics and Chemistry with the aid of a donation from the Rockefeller Foundation, and placed at the building known as the "Rockefeller building" at Serrano Street in Madrid. (Today the Rocasolano Chemical-Physics Institute, of the Spanish National Research Council, is located there.)

Spanish Civil War and exile[edit]

In 1933 he participated in the creation of the Summer International University of Santander (now the Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo), being called as its director the following year. In 1936, he was in Santander at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. He moved to Republican Madrid, traveling through France. In 1937, the president of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, Pieter Zeeman, named him secretary of that bureau, a post that he would occupy between 1937 and 1941, and he went to live to Paris. Nevertheless, after the end of the war, the Franco government demanded that he leave the post, even though the position had no representative value with respect to Spain. Cabrera resigned and went into self-exile in Mexico, where he was welcomed by the Faculty of Sciences at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, in which he became a Professor of Atomic Physics and History of Physics. In 1944 he began to direct the magazine Ciencia, edited by exiled Spanish scientists; after Cabrera's death the post passed to Ignacio Bolívar. In this same year, the Spanish Cultural Institution of Buenos Aires published his last work, El magnetismo de la materia. He died in exile in Mexico in 1945.

Photograph of the participants to the sixth Solvay Conference of 1930. Cabrera appears in the first row, seated, third from the viewer's right. He is seated between Owen Willans Richardson and Niels Bohr. Standing behind Cabrera are Wolfgang Pauli immediately to the right and Peter Debye to the left. Werner Heisenberg is standing on the extreme right. Albert Einstein is also seated next to Richardson. Paul Langevin is seated between Einstein and Marie Curie.

Positions[edit]

Cabrera held several positions and belonged to numerous institutions: member and president of the Real Academia de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales, member of the Real Academia Española (where he occupied the chair of his friend and teacher Santiago Ramón y Cajal), president of the Sociedad Española de Física y Química, director of the Laboratory of Physics Investigations (of the Junta para Ampliación de Estudios), director of the Instituto Nacional de Física y Química, foreign member of the French Academy of Sciences, member of the Scientific Committee of the 6th Solvay Conference of 1930 (Brussels), director of the Universidad Central de Madrid and of the Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo, and secretary of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in Paris. He was also a member, along with several Nobel Prize winners in Physics and Chemistry, of the sponsorship committee of the Society of Friends of André-Marie Ampère, which in 1931 created the first interactive scientific museum in France, the Ampère Museum.[4]

Works[edit]

Bust in San Cristóbal de La Laguna

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Ramón y Cajal was elected for the position in 1905 but never took the seat

References[edit]

  1. ^ Goldfarb, Ron B. (2013). "About the cover [photograph of Blas Cabrera Felipe]". IEEE Magnetics Letters. 4: C4. doi:10.1109/LMAG.2013.2290616. ISSN 1949-307X.
  • ^ Blas Cabrera at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • ^ de la Ciencia, Juan (20 May 2015). "Blas Cabrera, padre de la física moderna española" (in Spanish).
  • ^ Bulletin of the Society of Friends of André-Marie Ampère (in French). Malkoff (Seine). June 1931. p. 21.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blas_Cabrera&oldid=1187670254"

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