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  1. Friedrich Göppert (25 October 1870 – 9 February 1927) was a German paediatrician who worked at the University of Göttingen from 1910 to 1927. He was the first to describe Galactosemia.

  2. 10 de sept. de 2016 · However, the first detailed report was made in 1917 by Friedrich Göppert (Göppert, 1917). (As an interesting aside, Friedrich Göppert's scientific achievements have been largely overshadowed by those of his daughter, the Nobel Prize winning physicist Maria Goeppert-Mayer (Goeppert-Mayer, 1963).)

    • David J. Timson
    • 2016
  3. . Maria Goeppert Mayer. Maria Goeppert-Mayer. (1906/06/28 - 1972/02/20) Física estadounidense. – Ganar el premio Nobel no fue ni la mitad de emocionante que hacer el trabajo en sí –. Premio Nobel de Física en 1963. Conocida por: Modelo de capas nuclear. Padres: Friedrich Göppert y Maria Wolf. Cónyuge: Joseph Edward Mayer (m. 1930-1972)

  4. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Friedrich Göppert (25 October 1870 – 9 February 1927) was a German paediatrician who worked at the University of Göttingen from 1910 to 1927. He was the first to describe Galactosemia. Life and career. Friedrich Göppert was born in Kattowitz on 25 October 1870.

  5. Friedrich Göppert (* 25. Oktober 1870 in Kattowitz; † 9. Februar 1927 in Berlin) war ein deutscher Kinderarzt und Hochschullehrer. Leben und Wirken. Friedrich Göppert studierte Medizin an den Universitäten Heidelberg und Berlin. 1896 erlangte Göppert die Promotion zum Dr. med. an der Universität Breslau.

    • 25. Oktober 1870
    • Göppert, Friedrich
  6. 1 de mar. de 2013 · Maria Goeppert-Mayer's father, Friedrich Goeppert, was professor of medicine. Her mother was a piano teacher. Her grandfather, Heinrich Goeppert, was a law professor and was married to Gertrude nee Landsberg, from an assimilated Jewish family.

  7. Göppert was born in 1906, the only child of Friedrich Göppert and his wife, Maria. In 1910, the family moved to Göttingen, where Friedrich Göppert obtained a position as professor. Göppert was proximate to this center of intellectual activity and her family was physically and socially connected to many of Göttingen’s great intellectuals.