عرض مشاركة واحدة
قديم 11-10-2013, 04:33 PM
المشاركة 1649
ايوب صابر
مراقب عام سابقا

اوسمتي

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افتراضي
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56-مقياس ريختر تشالز ريختر أمريكي 1935م

- والده انفصل ع ن امه وهو طفل صغير
- عاش عند جده لامه الذي نقل العائلة الى لوس أنجلس
- يتيم اجتماعي بسبب الطلاق ولا يعرف متى مات والديه

تشارلز فرانسيس ريختر (بالإنجليزية: Charles Francis Richter) ‏ (26 أبريل 1900- 30 سبتمبر 1985) هو عالم زلازل وفيزيائي أمريكي. وريشتر معروف بأنه مخترع مقياس ريختر، والذي كان ولا زال يستخدم لقياس قوة الزلازل.

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Charles Francis Richter (/ˈrɪktər/; April 26, 1900 – September 30, 1985) was an American seismologist and physicist. Richter is most famous as the creator of the Richter magnitude scale which, until the development of the moment magnitude scale in 1979, quantified the size of earthquakes. Inspired by Kiyoo Wadati's 1928 paper on shallow and deep earthquakes, Richter first used the scale in 1935 after developing it in collaboration with Beno Gutenberg; both worked at California Institute of Technology. The quote "logarithmic plots are a device of the devil" is attributed to Richter.[1]

Childhood and education]

Richter was born in Overpeck, Ohio.[2] His parents (Fred W. Kinsinger and Lillian Anna Richter) were divorced when he was very young. He grew up with his maternal grandfather, who moved the family (including his mother) to Los Angeles in 1909. After graduating from Los Angeles High School he attended Stanford University and received his undergraduate degree in 1920. In 1928, he began work on his PhD in theoretical physics from the California Institute of Technology, but, before he finished it, he was offered a position at the Carnegie Institute of Washington. At this point, he became fascinated with seismology (the study of earthquakes and the waves they produce in the earth). Thereafter, he worked at the new Seismological Laboratory in Pasadena, under the direction of Beno Gutenberg. In 1932, Richter and Gutenberg developed a standard scale to measure the relative sizes of earthquake sources, called the Richter scale. In 1937, he returned to the California Institute of Technology, where he spent the rest of his career, eventually becoming professor of seismology in 1952. Charles Richter has German heritage: his great-grandfather came from Baden-Baden (Baden-Württemberg, Germany) in 1984 due to "political disturbances".[3
]