Gotthilf hagen biography of michael

          Discovered independently by Gotthilf Hagen, a German hydraulic engineer, this relation is also known as the Hagen-Poiseuille equation.

        1. Discovered independently by Gotthilf Hagen, a German hydraulic engineer, this relation is also known as the Hagen-Poiseuille equation.
        2. Gotthilf Hagen – German physicist; Georg Hamel – German mathematician ( - ); Thomas Henry Havelock – English mathematicianPages displaying wikidata.
        3. Handbuch Der Wasserbaukunst, Part 2 Volume 1 (Paperback).
        4. The Hagen number (Hg) is named after German physicist and hydraulic engineer.
        5. Nachdem G. Hagen sich mehrere Jahre mit Astronomie beschaftigt hatte und daraufhin zum Studium der Baukunst uberging, war er uberrascht davon, dass die.
        6. Handbuch Der Wasserbaukunst, Part 2 Volume 1 (Paperback)....

          Gotthilf Hagen

          German physicist

          Gotthilf Heinrich Ludwig Hagen (3 March 1797 – 3 February 1884) was a German civil engineer who made important contributions to fluid dynamics, hydraulic engineering and probability theory.

          Life and work

          Hagen was born in Königsberg, East Prussia (Kaliningrad, Russia) to Friedrich Ludwig Hagen and Helene Charlotte Albertine Hagen.[1] His father was a government official and his mother was the daughter of Christian Reccard, professor of Theology at University of Königsberg, consistorial councillor and astronomer.

          He showed promise in mathematics in high school and he went on to study at the University of Königsberg where his uncle, Karl Gottfried Hagen was professor of physics and chemistry.[1]

          In 1816 Hagen began studying mathematics and astronomy with Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel,[2] but in 1818 he switched to study civil engineering as he was more attracted to applied than theoretical science.[3] Never