27. Oktober 2009
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If it is true that the basic principle of our modern time is acceleration, then this means a progressive 'present shrinkage'. Today, not only the future but also the past is coming ever closer to us. It becomes an urgent task for physicists to become aware of the past of their own discipline, to process their physics history, and to pass this knowledge on to the public.
The association
The physicist and writer Dr. Peter Maria Schuster, who is also President of the History of Physics (HoP) Group of the European Physical Society (EPS, www.eps.org) and Chair of the History of Physics section of the Austrian Physical Society (ÖPG, www.oepg.at), set up the first European center for the history of physics in Pöllau. Since November 2009, the municipality of Pöllau - in agreement with the municipalities of Pöllauer Tal, and the Pöllauer Tal tourism association (www.naturpark-poellauertal.at) - rent the exhibition rooms in Pöllau on a long-term basis to the permanent exhibition echophysics.
The European Physical Society (EPS), which has over 100,000 members - physicists from 40 countries - provides spiritual support for the project to set up this first European center for the history of physics in Pöllau - Styria, in the green heart of Europe.
Our first European center for the history of physics has set itself the goal to communicate the history of European physics, but also the history of physicists to the interested public, starting with a national focus on Austria and Styria, in Pöllau. This is to be achieved in a permanent show and with changing exhibitions of historically valuable devices. Documentation, images, biographies, films and legacies of physicists, as well as didactic presentations of important physical experiments and phenomena supplement the exhibits and place them in their cultural, technical and economic context. The showpieces, with which outstanding discoveries of modern physics were made, bear witness to the craftsmanship and technics used in the last two centuries and are still valuable for our scientific work today.
For the heritage of our European physics, an invaluable cultural asset of Europe, survives not only in scientific data and research reports, but also in historical scientific equipment and components, in sketches, photographs, films and biographies of physicists.
For this purpose, generally understandable lectures on topics of physics are to be held on a regular basis in order to create ever new incentives for interested citizens to visit the museum. The lecturers will mainly be emeritus professors and lecturers of physics from Austrian universities. In addition,
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