Martin Oliver Steinhauser
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Martin Oliver Steinhauser | |
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Born | 8 March 1970 Ulm, Germany |
🏳️ Nationality | German |
🎓 Alma mater | University of Basel, Switzerland |
💼 Occupation | |
Martin Oliver Steinhauser (born 08 March 1970 in Ulm) is a German physicist, computational scientist and Full Professor of Applied Physics and Computer Science at Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences.
Life and Career[edit]
Martin Oliver Steinhauser studied physics and mathematics at the University of Ulm, at the University of Heidelberg, the Technical University of Munich and (as a full degree graduate exchange student) at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, MA, USA.
Steinhauser graduated with a German Diploma of Physics with honours at the University of Ulm in 1998 with a thesis on computer simulations of polyelectrolyte complexes.
From 1998 until 2021 he worked towards his PhD at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research and graduated as Dr. rer. nat. at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz with his thesis A Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study on the Influence of Chain Branching on the Properties of Polymer Systems..[1]
After a year as Software manager with SAP AG and a year of working in biotech industry in Heidelberg as researcher in the area of genetic epidemiology he joined the Fraunhofer Society from 2003 until 2020 as a Senior Researcher in Freiburg, Germany.[2] From 2012 until 2020 he was also lecturer at the Department of Chemistry at the University of Basel, Switzerland, where he earned his Doctor Habilitatus (Dr. rer. nat. habil.) in 2018.[3][4]
He also was a guest scientist at the University of Oxford, UK in 2013, an academic teacher at the University of Freiburg in 2010 and guest scientist at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore.[5] In the same year he was appointed as Full Professor of Applied Physics and Computer Science at the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences in Frankfurt, Germany.[6]
Steinhauser has been a chess player on master level since his youth and is actively participating in international chess tournaments.[7]
Research Interests[edit]
Prof. Steinhauser’s research interests cover many interdisciplinary fields including Algorithm Development, Space Debris, High-Performance Parallel Computing, Cancer Research, Computational Materials Science, Multiscale Modeling of Materials, Soft Matter and Shock Wave Physics.[8]
Prizes[edit]
He received a Research Prize from his Fraunhofer Institute in Freiburg (40.000 €) within theFast Track Program: Excellence in Cancer Research in 2019.[9]
Books[edit]
Steinhauser is the author of several monographs on Computational Science[10][11][12] and published a standard textbook on Quantum Mechanics[13] (in German language). This standard textbook on non-relativistic Quantum Mechanics is based on the lectures on (Advanced) Quantum Mechanics that were taught by Steinhauser at the University of Basel from 2013 until 2020.[14]
References[edit]
- ↑ [1] PhD archive at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
- ↑ [2] M.O. Steinhauser's personal website at Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences.
- ↑ [3] Announcement of the public Habilitation lecture in the calendar of events of the University of Basel.
- ↑ [4] Public Announcement of the Habilitation lecture of Martin O. Steinhauser in 2018 on the Fraunhofer Website.
- ↑ [5] M.O. Steinhauser's personal website at Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences.
- ↑ [6]M. O. Steinhauser's YouTube-Channel
- ↑ [7] DSAM Schachturnier in Brühl 2016.
- ↑ [8] M.O. Steinhauser's personal website at Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences
- ↑ [9] M.O. Steinhauser's personal website at Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences.
- ↑ [10]Martin O. Steinhauser, Multiscale Modeling and Simulation of Shock Wave-Induced Failure in Materials Science, Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, 2018
- ↑ [11]Martin O. Steinhauser, Computational Multiscale Modeling of Fluids and Solids, Graduate Texts in Physics, Springer, Heidelberg, Berlin, New York, 3rd ed. 2022
- ↑ [12]Martin O. Steinhauser, Computer Simulation in Physics and Engineering, deGruyter, Berlin, Boston 2013
- ↑ [13] . Martin O. Steinhauser, Quantenmechanik für Naturwissenschaftler, Springer Berlin, Heidelberg, 2nd ed. 2022
- ↑ [14] Course catalog of the University of Basel in fall semester 2020.
External links[edit]
- [15] publications indexed by Google Scholar
- [16] M. O. Steinhauser at Research Gate
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- 20th-century German physicists
- 21st-century German physicists
- Academic staff of Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences
- University of Mainz alumni
- Max Planck Society people
- Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research people
- 1970 births
- Full professors
- Space Debris
- Computational scientists
- Theoretical computer scientists