Theodor Wulf Explained

Theodor Wulf
Birth Date:28 July 1868
Birth Place:Hamm, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Death Place:Hallenberg, Hochsauerland, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Nationality:German
Occupation:Physicist, priest

Theodor Wulf (28 July 1868  - 19 June 1946) was a German physicist and Jesuit priest who was one of the first experimenters to detect excess atmospheric radiation.

Theodor Wulf became a Jesuit priest at the age of 20, before studying physics with Walther Nernst at the University of Göttingen. He taught physics at Valkenburg, a Jesuit University from 1904 to 1914 and 1918-1935. He designed and built an electrometer which could detect the presence of energetic charged particles (or electromagnetic waves). Since natural radiation sources on the ground were detected by his electrometer, he predicted that if he moved far enough away from those sources he would detect less radiation.

To test his hypothesis, in 1910 he compared the radiation at the bottom and the top of the Eiffel Tower.[1] [2] He found that the ionisation fell from 6 ions cm−3 to 3.5 ions cm−3 as he ascended the Eiffel Tower (330m). If the ionisation had been due to γ-rays originating at the surface of the Earth, the intensity of ions should have halved in 80m.[3] Energy was coming from outside the Earth's atmosphere and being detected by his device; this radiation was from cosmic rays. He published a paper in Physikalische Zeitschrift detailing the results of his four days of observation on the Eiffel Tower.[1] His results were not initially accepted.

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Notes and References

  1. Hörandel. Jörg R.. Early Cosmic-Ray Work Published in German. CENTENARY SYMPOSIUM 2012: DISCOVERY OF COSMIC RAYS. AIP Conference Proceedings. 1516. 52–60. 1212.0706. 4 Dec 2012. 10.1063/1.4792540. AIP Conference Proceedings. 2013AIPC.1516...52H. 73534390.
  2. Wulf. Theodor. Observations on the radiation of high penetration power on the Eiffel tower. Physikalische Zeitschrift. 1910. 11. 811.
  3. Book: Longair, M.S.. High energy astrophysics. 1981. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, UK. 0-521-23513-8. 11.