Johann Christian Andreas Doppler (November 29, 1803 – March 17, 1853) was an Austrian mathematician and physicist, most famous for the hypothesis of what is now known as the Doppler effect which causes the frequency of a wave to apparently change as its source moves toward or away from the observer.
Only one year later at the age of 39 he published his most notable work on the Doppler effect (for instance to be noticed in the change of sound of a quickly passing vehicle). In his time in Prague as professor he published more than 50 articles in mathematics, physics and astronomy.
His research career in Prague was interrupted by the revolutionary incidents of March 1848, when he fled to Vienna. There he was appointed head of the Institute for Experimental Physics at the University of Vienna in 1850.
He died from a pulmonary disease in Venice aged 50.
1803 births | 1853 deaths | Austrian mathematicians | Austrian physicists | Austrian scientists | Doppler effects
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