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From: Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de>
Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity
Subject: Re: Langevin's paradox again
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 09:10:56 +0200
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Am Montag000015, 15.07.2024 um 09:51 schrieb Athel Cornish-Bowden:
> On 2024-07-14 08:22:56 +0000, Thomas Heger said:
> 
>>>>
>>>> [ … ]
> 
>>>>
>> Not only his age was a problem.
>>
>> Einstein had a number of other problem, he had to overcome, to become 
>> a genius:
>>
>> he worked in the 'Patentamt' (patent office) of Bern for six days a 
>> week with ten hours each.
>>
>> This is a lot of time, but those were the conditions of work in the 
>> early 20th century.
>>
>> He had also a young family with a beautiful wife and a small kid, who 
>> would certainly occupy a few of the few hours left.
>>
>> In these few remaining hours he wrote in 1905 alone four 
>> ground-breaking papers, of which one won him a Nobel prize.
>>
>> Besides of that he also nwrote twenty reviews for 'Annalen der Physik' 
>> in the same year.
>> (I wonder how he had managed to get at least some sleep).
>>
>> But there a few more problems to overcome:
>>
>> computers were not invented then, nor xerox copiers.
>>
>> Therefore, he had to have all books in physical form in his own 
>> posession.
>>
>> This was expensive and also a lot to read.
> 
> Have you ever written and published a scientific paper? OK, if you're 
> the Thomas Heger that wrote
> 
> Thomas Heger and Madhukar C. Pandit "Optical wear assessment system for 
> grinding tools," Journal of Electronic Imaging 13(3), (2004)
> 
> and
> 
> T. Heger and M. Pandit, “Automatisierte Verschleißbeurteilung von 
> Schleifscheiben mit Mitteln der digitalen Bildverarbeitung,” in Automat. 
> Praxis 4, 50–56 (2002).
> 
> then maybe you have, though that's not exactly physics, or even science 
> at all (technology, rather).


I have never heard of that publication.

But the VERY funny thing is, that the topic of my 'Diplomarbeit' (kind 
of 'master thesis' in German) was almost exactly the topic of this article.

I have absolutely no idea, how that is possible, since 'wear of grinding 
tools' is such an extremely unlikely topic to assume simple coincidence.

So: no idea how that happend!


Absolutely nada...

But my real name is really 'Thomas Heger' and I live really in Berlin 
and have really studied at TU-Berlin and got a real Diploma from 
professor Spur for a reasearch on wear on grinding tools.

....


TH