Gustav Robert Kirchhoff was born on 12 March 1824 in Koenigsberg (Germany).
He graduated from the University of Koenigsberg in 1847, and after
a few years of lecturing in Berlin and Breslau. In 1852 he took on a
position at the University of Heidelberg where he remained till 1875.
After moving to Berlin,
his failing health forced him to prematurely retire in 1886.
He died in Berlin on 17 October 1887.
Already as a student Kirchhoff made important contributions to
electrical circuit theory, and he 1857 he produced a theoretical
calculation demonstrating that an alternating electrical current flowing
in a zero-resistance conductor would flow at the speed of light,
which provided an important stepping stone towards the electromagnetic
theory of light formulated in the 1890 by James Clerk Maxwell.
Kirchhoff most celebrated contributions to physics were
in the field of spectroscopy. In collaboration with Robert Bunsen
(1811-1899), Kirchhoff founded the (then purely empirical) science of
spectroscopy.
Kirchhoff and Bunsen began by effectively inventing the spectroscope,
a prism-based device that separated light in its primary chromatic
components, i.e., its spectrum,
with which they began studying the spectral "signature" of
various chemical elements in gaseous form.
The key observation made by Kirchhoff and Bunsen was
that the spectral lines emitted by a gas occurred
at the same wavelength (in modern parlance) as the absorption
lines observed when incandescent light (provided by Bunsen's now
famous gas burner) shone through the same gas
heated at the same temperature. Kirchhoff took the gigantic leap
of then identifying the dark spectral lines observed in the solar
spectrum, known since
Joseph Fraunhofer's earlier
work, with the emission lines observed by various
heated chemical substances. In this manner Kirchhoff
(1) demonstrated
the existence, in the Sun, of many chemical elements isolated on Earth,
(2) argued that the bulk of the Sun is comprised of a hot, incandescent liquid,
and (3) firmly established
the hot, gaseous nature of the solar atmosphere. The latter two points
led to the rapid demise of William Herschel's hypothesis of a dark,
cold sun surrounded by luminous atmosphere, which Herschel had put
forth on the basis of his sunspot model.
In the early 1960's Kirchhoff produced the first detailed map
of the solar spectrum (ruining his eyesight in the process), while
Bunsen busied himself with the spectroscopic discovery of hitherto
unknown chemical elements (Caesium in 1860, and Rubidium in 1861).
While subsequent spectroscopists improved greatly on Kirchhoff
instrumental techniques, his work with Bunsen remains at the root
of almost everything we know about the Sun and stars.
Bibliography:
Meadows, A.J. 1970, Early Solar Physics, Pergamon
Porter, R. 1994, The Biographical Dictionary of Scientists,
second ed., Oxford University Press.
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