Peter Schwerdtfeger Explained

Peter A. Schwerdtfeger
Birth Date:1 September 1955
Birth Place:Stuttgart, West Germany
Work Institution:Massey University Auckland
Doctoral Advisor:Heinzwerner Preuß
Doctoral Students:Patricia Hunt

Peter Schwerdtfeger (born 1 September 1955) is a German scientist. He holds a chair in theoretical chemistry at Massey University in Auckland, New Zealand, serves as director of the Centre for Theoretical Chemistry and Physics, is the head of the New Zealand Institute for Advanced Study, and is a former president of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.

Academic career

Schwerdtfeger took his first degree in chemical engineering at Aalen University in 1976, after finishing a degree as chemical-technical assistant at the Institute Dr. Flad in Stuttgart in 1973. He studied chemistry, physics and mathematics at Stuttgart University where he received his PhD in theoretical chemistry in 1986. He received a Feodor-Lynen fellowship of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to join the chemistry department and later the School of Engineering at University of Auckland in 1987. After a two years research fellowship at the Research School of Chemistry (Australian National University), he returned to Auckland University in 1991 for a lectureship in chemistry. He received his habilitation and venia legendi (Privatdozent) in 1995 from the Philipps University of Marburg. He held a personal chair in physical chemistry for five years until moving to Massey University Albany in 2004, where he established the Centre for Theoretical Chemistry and Physics. He became a founding member of the New Zealand Institute for Advanced Study in 2007. In 2007 he received the Royal Society Australasian Chemistry Lectureship, and was the Källen Lecturer in Physics at Lund University (Sweden) in 2015. From 2017-2018 he was member of the Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. He has published 350 papers in international journals. He was awarded eight consecutive Marsden awards by the Royal Society of New Zealand.

One of Schwedtfeger's notable doctoral students is Patricia Hunt, professor at Victoria University of Wellington.[1]

Fellowships and awards

Selected publications

References

  1. Hunt . Patricia Anne . Jahn-Teller Distortions in Molecules Containing Group 15 Elements . 1998 . PhD thesis . .
  2. https://royalsociety.org.nz/what-we-do/funds-and-opportunities/james-cook-research-fellowship/james-cook-research-fellowships-recipients/list-of-recipients/ Royal Society of New Zealand James Cook Fellowship: List of Recipients
  3. http://www.iaqms.org/members/schwerdtfeger.php International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science
  4. Web site: Royal Society of New Zealand recognises achievements of researchers . 26 November 2014 . Royal Society of New Zealand . 27 November 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141220080825/http://www.royalsociety.org.nz/2014/11/26/royal-society-of-new-zealand-recognises-achievements-of-researchers/ . 20 December 2014 . dead .
  5. "Explosive start for NZ's highest science honour recipient". The New Zealand Herald. 28 November 2014.
  6. Web site: NZIP Award Recipients – New Zealand Institute of Physics . 2023-03-16 . en-US.

External links