Everything about Carl Zeiss totally explained
» For the company with the same name, see Zeiss.
Carl Zeiss (
September 11,
1816 –
December 3,
1888) was an
optician commonly known for the company he founded,
Zeiss. Zeiss himself also made a few contributions to
lens manufacturing that have aided the modern production of lenses. Raised in
Weimar,
Germany, he became a notable lens maker in the
1840s when he created high quality lenses that were "wide open", or in other words, had a very large
aperture range that allowed for very clear images. He did this in the city of
Jena at a self opened workshop, where he started his lens making career. At first his lenses were only used in the production of
microscopes but when
cameras were invented, his company (
Zeiss) began manufacturing high quality lenses for cameras. He died in
Jena.
Youth
Zeiss began his life in pre-imperial
Germany where he went to a
grammar school, and undertook
apprenticeship under Dr.
Friedrich Körner, mechanic and supplier to the
court. He later attended lectures in
mathematics, experimental
physics,
anthropology,
mineralogy and
optics at
Jena University. After seven years he opened a small workshop by himself with hardly any tools. He made many lenses but had little recognition until
1847 when he hired his second and third apprentice. The same year his former master, Dr.Anthony Marc Körner died, inspiring Zeiss to devote his life to working in the area of
microscopes.
Life
In
1847 Carl Zeiss started making
microscopes full-time. His first
innovation was making simpler microscopes that only used one lens, and were therefore only intended for
dissecting work. He sold around 23 of them in his first year of production. He soon decided that he needed a new challenge so he began making
compound microscopes. He first created the
Stand I which went to market in
1857.
In
1861 he was awarded a gold medal at the
Thuringain Industrial Exhibition for his designs. They were considered to be among the best scientific instruments in
Germany. By this point he'd about 20 people working under him with his business still growing all the time. In
1866 the
Zeiss workshop sold their 1000th
microscope. He then continued on for a few years, and assumed he'd reached his fullest potential, but he met
Dr. Ernst Abbe, a
physicist that he joined up with in
1872. Their combined efforts lead to the discovery of the
Abbe sine condition.
During this period, Zeiss made his best lenses that he ever had up to this point. Theoretically, the
Abbe sine condition could greatly improve how well lenses could be made. The problem was, there wasn't any type of glass that was strong enough to fully test the theory.
Luckily, Dr. Ernst Abbe soon met
Otto Schott, a 30 year old
glass chemist who had just received his
doctorate. They collaborated and soon produced a new type glass in
1886 that could fully use the
Abbe sine condition. This new type of glass paved the way for a new class of microscope objective: the
apochromatic (often abbreviated 'apo'). Zeiss used water
immersion to form a
compensating eyepiece which produced images with little or no
color distortion.
His son had entered the business with him, but retired soon after Carl Zeiss's death of natural causes on
December 3,
1888. The business was incorporated as the Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung in
1889, and it gained an international reputation for the manufacture of optical instruments of all kinds.
Publications
- Auerbach, Das Zeisswerk und die Carl Zeiss-Stiftung in Jena (third edition, Jena, 1907)
Further Information
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