Gerd Binnig

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Gerd Binnig
Gerd Binnig sw.jpg
Born (1947-07-20)20 July 1947
Frankfurt am Main
Fields Physics
Institutions IBM Zurich Research Laboratory
Alma mater J.W. Goethe University, Frankfurt
Doctoral advisor Werner Martienssen
Eckhardt Hoenig
Doctoral students D. P. E. Smith, Franz Josef Giessibl, Frank Ohnesorge
Known for Scanning tunneling microscope, atomic force microscope
Notable awards Nobel Prize in Physics (1986)
The Elliott Cresson Medal (1987)

Gerd Binnig (born 20 July 1947[1]) is a German physicist, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986 for the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope.[2]

He was born in Frankfurt am Main and played in the ruins of the city during his childhood. His family lived partly in Frankfurt and partly in Offenbach am Main, and he attended school in both cities. At the age of 10, he decided to become a physicist, but he soon wondered whether he had made the right choice. He concentrated more on music, playing in a band. He also started playing the violin at 15 and played in his school orchestra.[1]

Binnig studied physics at the J.W. Goethe University in Frankfurt, gaining a bachelor's degree in 1973 and remaining there do a PhD with in Werner Martienssen's group, supervised by Eckhardt Hoenig.[3]

In 1969, he married Lore Wagler, a psychologist, and they have a daughter born in Switzerland and a son born in California.[1] His hobbies are reading, swimming and golf.

In 1978, he accepted an offer from IBM to join their Zürich research group, where he worked with Heinrich Rohrer, Christoph Gerber and Edmund Weibel. There they developed the scanning tunneling microscope (STM), an instrument for imaging surfaces at the atomic level.[4] The Nobel committee described the effect that the invention of the STM had on science, saying that "entirely new fields are opening up for the study of the structure of matter."[2] The physical principles on which the STM was based were already known before the IBM team developed the STM, but Binnig and his colleagues were the first to solve the significant experimental challenges involved in putting it into effect.[2]

The IBM Zürich team were soon recognized with a number of prizes: the German Physics Prize, the Otto Klung Prize, the Hewlett Packard Prize and the King Faisal Prize.[1] In 1986, Binnig and Rohrer shared half of the Nobel Prize in Physics, the other half of the Prize was awarded to Ernst Ruska.

In 1985, Binnig invented the atomic force microscope (AFM) [5] and Binnig, Christoph Gerber and Calvin Quate went on to develop a working version of this new microscope for insulating surfaces.[6]

In 1987 Binnig was appointed IBM Fellow. In the same year, he started the IBM Physics group Munich, working on creativity[7] and atomic force microscopy [8]

In 1994 Professor Gerd Binnig founded Definiens which turned in the year 2000 into a commercial enterprise. Today, companies and institutions around the world use Definiens' technology to maximize the value of images and thereby enabling better decisions. Definiens currently focuses on applications for Life Sciences and Earth Sciences. In Life Sciences, Definiens' technology is used to accelerate the drug discovery, development, and diagnostics processes. In Earth Sciences, Definiens' technology enables satellite and aerial image classification and analysis with greater speed, accuracy and insight. In 2014, Definiens was acquired by Astra Zeneca for an initial consideration of $150 million.

The Binnig and Rohrer Nanotechnology Center, an IBM-owned research facility in Rüschlikon, Zurich is named after Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer.

References

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  5. G. Binnig, "Atomic force microscope and method for imaging surfaces with atomic resolution", US Patent US4724318 (priority date Nov 25 1985)
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  7. G. Binnig, "Aus dem Nichts. Über die Kreativität von Natur und Mensch", Piper (1990).
  8. Franz Josef Giessibl, Christoph Gerber and G. Binnig, "A low-temperature atomic force/scanning tunneling microscope for ultrahigh vacuum", J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B9, 984-988 (1991).

External links

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