Myron Mathisson (4 December 1897 â 13 September 1940) was a Polish theoretical physicist who made early contributions to the theory of general relativity, particularly in the motion of spinning bodies and the analysis of hyperbolic partial differential equations. His work on the equations of motion for extended bodies influenced later formulations such as the MathissonâÂÂPapapetrouâÂÂDixon equations, and he made progress on aspects of the Hadamard conjecture in specific cases.
Mathisson was born in Warsaw, 4 December 1897. In 1915, Mathisson completed his secondary education at a philological gymnasium in Warsaw, graduating with a gold medal, a distinction awarded for academic excellence. He began his studies at the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the Warsaw University of Technology. Then, from 1917 he studied at the University of Warsaw where he graduated in 1924 under the guidance of Czesà Âaw Biaà Âobrzeski.
Between the years 1918âÂÂ1919 he served in the military.
In 1930, earned his doctorate at the University of Warsaw on the work of Sur le movement tournant d'un corps dans un champ de gravitation, and began to live there in 1932. He became a professor at the University of Kazan in 1936. The following year, he returned to Warsaw. In the years 1937âÂÂ1939, he worked at the Jagiellonian University, under .
Mathisson corresponded with Albert Einstein on theoretical aspects of relativity, as documented in archival correspondence. Niels Bohr invited him to Copenhagen. During his career he also interacted with Jacques Hadamard in Paris in 1939 and with Paul Dirac in Cambridge, England. Later, Dirac arranged for the posthumous publication of some of his work and wrote an obituary in Nature.
In chronological order; M. Mathisson, A. Papapetrou, and W. G. Dixon contributed to the derivation of the equations for a spinning body moving in a gravitational field, now known as the MathissonâÂÂPapapetrouâÂÂDixon equations.
Due to financial difficulties, Mathisson had to work as a Hebrew translator, as a draftsman producing technical drawings, and engineering calculations of the statics of reinforced concrete structures.
Mathisson died of tuberculosis in Cambridge, on 13 September 1940.
During his short lifetime, he published the following 12 scientific papers: