Google Doodle yesterday celebrated the 135th anniversary of Max Born born in Breslau, Germany (now part of the Polish state) on December 11, 1882.
Max Born is a prominent physicist and mathematician who contributes in the field of quantum mechanics, the branch of physics studying very small objects, on the atomic scale and subatomic particles.
In the international world, Max Born is known as the inventor of the Born Rule, a theory that uses the probability of mathematics to predict the location of wave particles in a quantum system.
The Born Rule is an important part of the effort to learn and apply quantum mechanics which generates many advanced discoveries in the modern world, including personal computers, lasers, and medical imaging devices (MRI).
With his intelligent brain, Max Born earned his Ph.D. at Gottingen University, where he later became professor of physics and taught a number of famous scientists of the time.
In 1933, with the rise of the Nazi Party to the pinnacle of power, the Jewish Max Born was forced to flee to Inggirs. There he worked at St. John's College and continue physics research.
The day before World War II broke out in Europe, on August 31, 1939, Max Born became a British citizen. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954 for his contribution in the field of quantum mechanics.
Max Born lived in Edinburgh, England, until his retirement in 1952. He then moved to West Germany and died in the country on January 7, 1970, at the age of 87