20th-century Danish seismologist

Inge Lehmann ( 13 May 1888 – 21 February 1993 ) was a danish seismologist and geophysicist. In 1936, she discovered that the Earth has a solid inner core inside a melt out core. Before that, seismologists believed Earth ‘s core to be a single mellow sector, being unable, however, to explain careful measurements of seismic waves from earthquakes, which were inconsistent with this idea. Lehmann analysed the seismic wave measurements and concluded that Earth must have a solid inner core and a dissolve out core to produce seismic waves that matched the measurements. other seismologists tested and then accepted Lehmann ‘s explanation. Lehmann was besides one of the longest-lived scientists, having lived for over 104 years. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ]

early liveliness and education [edit ]

Inge Lehmann was born and grew up in Østerbro, a separate of Copenhagen. She was identical shy as a child, a behavior that continued throughout her animation. Her mother, Ida Sophie Tørsleff, was a housewife ; her father was experimental psychologist Alfred Georg Ludvik Lehmann ( 1858–1921 ).

Reading: Inge Lehmann

She received her school education at Fællesskolen, a didactically progressive high school that treated girls and boys equally, enrolling them in the lapp course of study and adulterous activities. This school was led by Hanna Adler, Niels Bohr ‘s aunt. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] According to Lehmann, her founder and Adler were the most significant influences on her intellectual exploitation. At senesce 18, she achieved a first rank grade in the capture examination for Copenhagen University. In 1907, she started her studies in mathematics, chemistry and physics at the University of Copenhagen and University of Cambridge. These studies were interrupted by poor health. She continued her studies of mathematics in Cambridge from 1910 to 1911 at Newnham College. In 1911, she returned from Cambridge feeling exhausted from the work and put her studies aside for a while. She developed good computational skills in an statistician office she worked in for a few years until she resumed studies at Copenhagen University in 1918. She completed the candidata magisterii degree in physical science and mathematics in two years, graduating in 1920. When she returned to Denmark in 1923, she accepted a put at Copenhagen University as an assistant to J.F. Steffensen, the professor of actuarial science. [ 7 ] Lehmann had a younger sister, Harriet, who became a movie writer and who had family and children in contrast to Lehmann, who lived by herself all her adult liveliness. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] [ 10 ]

career [edit ]

S-waves in the Earth near the surface in three tectonic provinces: TNA = Tectonic North America SNA = Shield North America and ATL = North Atlantic.[11] A modern agreement of the Lehmann discontinuity : speed of seismic-waves in the worldly concern near the surface in three tectonic provinces : TNA = Tectonic North America SNA = Shield North America and ATL = North Atlantic. In 1925 Lehmann ‘s seismology career began as she became an adjunct to the geodesist Niels Erik Nørlund. She was paired with three other assistants who had never so a lot as seen a seismograph before. She began the task of setting up seismological observatories in Denmark and Greenland. In the interim, she studied seismology on her own. She went overseas for three months to study seismology with leading experts in the field such as Beno Gutenberg, who had determined the distance to the core-mantle boundary within 15 kilometer of the soon accepted value. Based on her studies in seismology, in 1928 she earned the magister scientiarum degree ( equivalent to an MA ) in geodesy and accepted a position as state geodesist and head of the department of seismology at the Geodetical Institute of Denmark led by Nørlund. [ 12 ] Lehmann looked into improving the co-ordination and psychoanalysis of measurements from Europe ‘s seismographic observatories, american samoa well as many other scientific enterprise. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] These improvements lay at the heart of her by and by discoveries. In a paper titled P’ ( 1936 ), [ 15 ] [ 16 ] Lehmann was the foremost to interpret P wave arrivals—which inexplicably appeared in the P wave shadow of the Earth ‘s core—as reflections from an inside congress of racial equality, for case from the strong 1929 Murchison earthquake. [ 17 ] early leading seismologists of the time, such as Beno Gutenberg, Charles Richter, and Harold Jeffreys, adopted this interpretation within two or three years, but it took until 1971 for the rendition to be shown adjust by computer calculations. [ 18 ] Lehmann was importantly hampered in her work and maintaining international contacts during the german occupation of Denmark in World War II. She served as the Chair of the danish Geophysical Society in 1940 and 1944 respectively.

In 1952, Lehmann was considered for a professorship in geophysics at Copenhagen University, but was not appointed. In 1953, she retired from her position at the Geodetic Institute. She moved to the US for several years and collaborated with Maurice Ewing and Frank Press on investigations of Earth ‘s crust and upper blanket. During this bring, she discovered another seismic discontinuity, which are a step-change increase in the speeds of seismic waves at depths between 190 and 250 kilometer. This discontinuity was named after her, being coined as the Lehmann discontinuity. Francis Birch noted that the “ Lehmann discontinuity was discovered through exacting examination of seismic records by a master of a black art for which no sum of computerization is probably to be a accomplished stand-in. ” [ 18 ]

Awards and honours [edit ]

Lehmann received many honours for her outstanding scientific achievements, among them the Gordon Wood Award ( 1960 ), the Emil Wiechert Medal ( 1964 ), the Gold Medal of the Danish Royal Society of Science and Letters ( 1965 ), the Tagea Brandt Rejselegat ( 1938 and 1967 ), her election as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1969, [ 19 ] the William Bowie Medal ( 1971, as the first charwoman ), and the Medal of the Seismological Society of America in 1977. She was awarded honorary doctorates from Columbia University in 1964 and from the University of Copenhagen in 1968, a well as numerous honorific memberships. The asteroid 5632 Ingelehmann was named in her honor and in 2015 ( which was the hundredth anniversary of women ‘s right to vote in Denmark ) Lehmann got, in recognition of her great clamber against the male-dominated research community that existed in Denmark in the mid-20th century, a new mallet species named after her : Globicornis (Hadrotoma) ingelehmannae sp. n., Jiří Háva & Anders Leth Damgaard, 2015. [ 20 ] Because of her contribution to geological skill, in 1997, the American Geophysical Union established the annual Inge Lehmann Medal to honour “ outstanding contributions to the sympathize of the structure, writing, and dynamics of the Earth ‘s mantle and core. ” [ 13 ] [ 21 ] [ 22 ] On the 127th anniversary of her parturition, Google dedicated its global Google Doodle to her. [ 23 ] [ 24 ] [ 25 ] A new memorial dedicated to Lehmann was installed on Frue Plads in Copenhagen in 2017. The repository is designed by Elisabeth Toubro. [ 26 ]

Key publications [edit ]

  • Lehmann, Inge (1936). “P'”. Publications du Bureau Central Séismologique International. A14 (3): 87–115.

See besides [edit ]

References [edit ]

foster read [edit ]