Manfred Trümper -- Sketch of Science-related
Biography.
2010-01-25.
I
was born on 05 July 1934 in Wernigerode/Germany as the second child of a
vocational school teacher. In June 1952 I graduated from the
Carolinum high
school
(re-named Karl-Marx-Oberschule during the soviet occupation) in
Bernburg/Germany.
In
fall 1952 I enrolled as a student of physics at the Martin Luther
University in Halle
. As
a child of bourgeois parents I did not qualify for a
higher education under the rules prelevant in the
"worker's paradise", but it
happened that in this year Walter Ulbricht, Secretary
General of the ``Sozialistische
Einheitspartei Deutschlands = SED'', had declared a drive
to economically overtake
capitalist West Germany
within the next 10 years. This meant e.g. to increase by
about
a factor 4 the number of newly admitted physics students.
As there were not enough
applications from high school graduates with proletarian
background, I was admitted
for the studies in physics, and so was my elder brother
Joachim.
Stalin died in early March 1953. At once the socialist
system went into
a delirious state of mourning. Instantly night vigils
around the black-draped
portrait of the mustached "genius, greatest statesman,
military leader, scientist,
philosopher" etc. were set up. In the morning of the next
day we first-year students
were in the overcrowded physics auditorium, waiting for the
main lecture on
experimental physics to begin, to be held by Professor W.
Messerschmidt. But a
comrade from the communist party leadership appeared to
read a message of
condolences to be sent to the Central
Committee of the soviet communist party.
It was to be accepted by acclamation, but all what could
be heard was a faint,
bored knocking on the tables. Then, when Professor
Messerschmidt entered the
lecture hall, he was greeted by thunderous applause
which did not want to
subside. First he appeared startled, then he smiled faintly as he understood
what had triggered the enthusiasm of his students.
In
summer of 1953, after the "June 17" uprising of East-German workers,
the communist
regime
was weakened and restrictions on travel to
West Germany
were relaxed.
However,
a year later, in spring and summer of 1954, it became clear that the
regime
was tightening its grip of power and was returning to more repressive
measures.
Therefore,
in the fall of 1954 I left the German Democratic Republic and enrolled
as a
student of physics at Hamburg University
.
Leaving the "DDR" was not an easy task. The university
administration kept
under lock all my academic records, including the high school
diploma. I gambled
on the hypothesis that I could not be accused of subversion
and secret
preparation of "Republikflucht" if I told everybody about
my plan to move to
Hamburg
. I said that
in Hamburg I wanted to study General Relativity which was
not represented in Halle
. My fellow
students thought I was nuts. Everybody knew
that it was virtually impossible to change the place of
studies even within the
DDR. And I was talking about going to the ``Klassenfeind'' in
the West! So I
went to Professor W. Messerschmidt, who I knew was quite
unhappy about the
excessive number of physics students which had been
forced upon him and which
exceeded by large the capacity of his laboratory. He
wrote a strong letter of
recommendation in support of my application for an
exmatriculation. The
university administration was confused when I submitted my
application because
such a case had not occurred before. People were fleeing by
the hundreds a day,
but not in this way. Within a day I got my exmatricle and my
academic records
and then, in a final gesture of triumph, I went to the
office of the youth
organization FDJ and resigned from my membership.
My
teachers at the Martin-Luther-Universität Halle were, among
others, O.-H. Keller
and H.
Grötzsch in mathematics, and W. Messerschmidt (basic physics course), Hiecke
(mechanics).
My
teachers at the Universität Hamburg were, among others, H. Braun,
L. Collatz, H. Hasse,
E.
Sperner in mathematics, and W. Lenz, P. Jordan, H. Raether, H. Lehmann
in physics.
I
got my state diploma in physics in 1959 and the doctorate in 1962, with
Pascual Jordan
as my
thesis advisor. The subject of my thesis dealt with the restrictions
imposed
on the
flow of matter and on the gravitational field by the Einstein field
equations.
Positions held.
Syracuse University
, Postdoc
with Peter Bergmann
Yeshiva University
, Postdoc
with Peter Bergmann
Hamburg University
, Assistant
to Pascual Jordan
North Texas
State University
, Visiting
Associate Professor of Physics
Texas A&M
University , Associate Professor of Physics
Université
d'Oran, Algeria, Professeur de Physique
Max
Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Munich , Scientific Collaborator in the General
Relativity
Group
Université
de Rennes /France, Professeur Visiteur, groupe G. M. Stephan
ISP
Bukavu/Kivu, Zaire, Professeur Ordinaire
ENSSAT
Lannion/France, Professeur Visiteur, groupe G. M. Stephan
From
1992 I worked as a representative for TÜV Süd (a major German
certification body for product safety and quality management) in
Japan and in
China . I retired in 1999 and moved in 2000 to the
city of Uzès
in southern
France
, where I now live.
Scientific work.
1) About shear-free and irrotational flows in an
Einstein vacuum field of type I (1962).
2) Reduction of the full Bianchi identities in
the presence of a timelike vector field (1964).
I never published this work,
though it was distributed as a preprint to various GR work
groups
in Europe
and the
US
.
My equations were first published by S. Hawking
in
Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 145, No.2, 1966.
I gave seminar talks about this
work
- on
15 Dec. 1964 in Cambridge at the invitiation by Denis Sciama/George Ellis, and
in
the presence of Steven Hawking,
- on
6 Feb. 1965
at the Institute Henri Poincar\'e in Paris , at the Invitation by
M. A. Tonnelat, and in
the presence of A. Lichnerowicz,
-
on 8 Feb. 1965 at the Institut de Mathématique,
Université Libre de Bruxelles, at the
invitation by R. Debever and M. Cahen.
3) I showed how to furnish the Lagrangian
configuration space-time of a holonomic system
with
a linear connection so that the trajectory of the system is a geodesic.
4)
Construction of the complete tree for the "33 hole
central vacancy peg solitaire
problem."
5) My current research is on the Collatz
Conjecture.
"Handles, Hooks, and
Scenarios: A fresh Look at the Collatz Conjecture"'
Ref.:
http://arxiv.org/PS\_cache/math/pdf/0612/0612228.pdf
6) Work on the relation between the Collatz
problem and a free semigroup is in progress.
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