Rudolf Walter Ladenburg was a German atomic physicist. He emigrated from Germany as early as 1932 and became a Brackett Research Professor at Princeton University. When the wave of German emigration began in 1933, he was the principal coordinator for job placement of exiled physicists in the United States. Albert Einstein gave the eulogy at Rudolf's funeral. He and his wife Else Uhthoff had three children, Margarethe, Kurt, and Eva. Kurt had two children, Toni and Nils Ladenburg.
Ladenburg in 1937
Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen was a German mechanical engineer and physicist, who, on 8 November 1895, produced and detected electromagnetic radiation in a wavelength range known as X-rays or Röntgen rays, an achievement that earned him the inaugural Nobel Prize in Physics in 1901. In honour of Röntgen's accomplishments, in 2004 the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) named element 111, roentgenium, a radioactive element with multiple unstable isotopes, after him. The unit of measurement roentgen was also named after him.
Röntgen in 1900
Birthplace of Röntgen in Remscheid-Lennep
Wall art by the house where Wilhelm Röntgen lived from 1863 until 1865 in the Schalkwijkstraat in Utrecht. Made by Jackie Sleper in 2005.
Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen's marble bust at the Deutsches Museum in Munich