Walter Gröbli Explained

Walter Gröbli
Birth Date:23 September 1852
Birth Place:Oberuzwil, Switzerland
Death Place:Piz Blas, Switzerland
Spouse:Emma Bodmer
Parents:Isaak Gröbli and Elisabetha Grob
Field:Mathematics
Work Institutions:ETH Zurich
Alma Mater:ETH Zurich
University of Göttingen
Thesis Title:Specielle Probleme über die Bewegung geradliniger paralleler Wirbelfäden
Thesis Url:https://www.e-rara.ch/doi/10.3931/e-rara-9445
Thesis Year:1877
Doctoral Advisor:Hermann Schwarz
Doctoral Students:Ernst Amberg

Walter Gröbli (23 September 1852 – 26 June 1903) was a Swiss mathematician.

Life and work

His father, Issak Gröbli, was an industrial who was invented a shuttle embroidery machine in 1863, and his old brother is credited to have introduced the invention in the United States. Walter Gröbli was more interested in mathematics than in embroidery and he studied from 1871 to 1875 at the Polytechnicum of Zürich under Hermann Schwarz and Heinrich Martin Weber. Then Gröbli studied at university of Berlin and he was awarded a doctorate in the university of Göttingen (1877).

The following six years, Gröbli was assistant of Frobenius in Polytechnicum of Zürich. In 1883 he was elected mathematics professor in the Gymnasium of Zürich. Despite his mathematical talent he did not follow a research career, he was happy to be a schoolmaster.

His other main passion was mountaineering. He died with other three colleagues on a mountain accident climbing the Piz Blas.

The only work known by Gröbli was his doctoral thesis dissertation. It deals about three vortex motion, four vortex motion having an axis of symmetry and

2n

vortex motion having

n

symmetry axes. This work is a classical in vortex dynamics literature.

Bibliography

External links