Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Otto_SchottOtto Schott - Wikipedia

    Friedrich Otto Schott (1851–1935) was a German chemist, glass technologist, and the inventor of borosilicate glass. Schott systematically investigated the relationship between the chemical composition of the glass and its properties.

  2. production of Jena glass. In Jena glass. …by the German glass chemist Otto Schott, who, with Ernst Abbe and Carl Zeiss, founded Schott and Associates Glass Technology Laboratory in Jena, Germany, in 1884. The early Jena glass—a sodium–magnesium–aluminum–zinc borosilicate containing some. Read More.

  3. Otto Schott, a glass chemist and manufacturer, was born in Witten, Germany on December 17, 1851. He is considered a leading pioneer in modern glass chemistry due to his creation of a variety of high quality glass for the optics industry.

  4. www.schott.com › en-us › about-usHistory | SCHOTT

    Otto Schott (1851-1935) is considered to be the inventor of modern glass science and the forerunner of the specialty glass industry. With his systematic research, the chemist was the first to develop glasses with precise predetermined properties that could be reproduced at any time.

  5. Apr 28, 2015 · Otto Schott. German glassmaker (1851–1935). Invented new types of glass that could reach the diffraction limit in lenses. When Galileo first pointed his telescope into the night sky, he not only changed our idea of our place in the universe, but he also opened up a Pandora’s box of optical fascination.

  6. Feb 2, 2009 · The glass chemist Otto Schott (1851-1935) founded the company in Jena together with Ernst Abbe and Carl and Roderich Zeiss as “Schott & Associates Glass Technology Laboratory” in 1884. Today, SCHOTT is an international technology company whose core purpose is to improve how people live and work.

  7. December 17th 2001, is the 150th anniversary of the birth of Otto Schott. The glass chemist and technician was one of the most important scientists, technologists and entrepreneurs in Germany in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.