Erwin Schrödinger was born on August 12, 1887, in Vienna, the
only child of Rudolf Schrödinger, who was married to a daughter of
Alexander Bauer, his Professor of Chemistry at the Technical College of
Vienna.
Erwin's father came from a Bavarian family which
generations before had settled in Vienna. He was a highly gifted
man with a broad education. After having finished his chemistry
studies, he devoted himself for years to Italian painting. After
this he took up botany, which resulted in a series of papers on
plant phylogeny.
Schrödinger's wide interests dated from his school years at
the Gymnasium, where he not only had a liking for the scientific
disciplines, but also appreciated the severe logic of ancient
grammar and the beauty of German poetry. (What he abhorred was
memorizing of data and learning from books.)
From 1906 to 1910 he was a student at the University of Vienna,
during which time he came under the strong influence of Fritz
Hasenöhrl, who was Boltzmann's successor. It was in these
years that Schrödinger acquired a mastery of eigenvalue
problems in the physics of continuous media, thus laying the
foundation for his future great work. Hereafter, as assistant to
Franz Exner, he, together with his friend K. W. F. Kohlrausch,
conducted practical work for students (without himself, as he
said, learning what experimenting was). During the First World
War he served as an artillery officer.
In 1920 he took up an academic position as assistant to Max Wien, followed
by positions at Stuttgart (extraordinary professor), Breslau (ordinary
professor), and at the University of Zurich (replacing von Laue) where
he settled for six years. In later years Schrödinger looked back
to his Zurich period with great pleasure - it was here that he enjoyed
so much the contact and friendship of many of his colleagues, among whom
were Hermann Weyl and Peter Debye. It was also his most fruitful period,
being actively engaged in a variety of subjects of theoretical physics.
His papers at that time dealt with specific heats of solids, with problems
of thermodynamics (he was greatly interested in Boltzmann's probability
theory) and of atomic spectra; in addition, he indulged in physiological
studies of colour (as a result of his contacts with Kohlrausch and Exner,
and of Helmholtz's lectures). His great discovery, Schrödinger's
wave equation, was made at the end of this epoch-during the first half
of 1926.
It came as a result of his dissatisfaction with the quantum
condition in Bohr's orbit theory and his belief that atomic
spectra should really be determined by some kind of eigenvalue
problem. For this work he shared with Dirac the Nobel Prize for
1933.
In 1927 Schrödinger moved to Berlin as Planck's successor.
Germany's capital was then a centre of great scientific activity
and he enthusiastically took part in the weekly colloquies among
colleagues, many of whom "exceeding him in age and reputation".
With Hitler's coming to power (1933), however, Schrödinger
decided he could not continue in Germany. He came to England and
for a while held a fellowship at Oxford. In 1934 he was invited
to lecture at Princeton University and was offered a permanent
position there, but did not accept. In 1936 he was offered a
position at University of Graz, which he accepted only after much
deliberation and because his longing for his native country
outweighed his caution. With the annexation of Austria in 1938,
he was immediately in difficulty because his leaving Germany in
1933 was taken to be an unfriendly act. Soon afterwards he
managed to escape to Italy, from where he proceeded to Oxford and
then to University of Ghent. After a short stay he moved to
the newly created Institute for Advanced Studies in Dublin, where he
became Director of the School for Theoretical Physics. He
remained in Dublin until his retirement in 1955.
All this time Schrödinger continued his research and published many
papers on a variety of topics, including the problem of unifying gravitation
and electromagnetism, which also absorbed Einstein and which is still
unsolved; (he was also the author of the well-known little book "What
is Life?", 1944). He remained greatly interested in the foundations of
atomic physics. Schrödinger disliked the generally accepted dual
description in terms of waves and particles, with a statistical interpretation
for the waves, and tried to set up a theory in terms of waves only. This
led him into controversy with other leading physicists.
After his retirement he returned to an honoured position in
Vienna. He died on the 4th of January, 1961, after a long
illness, survived by his faithful companion, Annemarie Bertel,
whom he married in 1920.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1965
This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1933