Karl Lintner


Karl Lintner is an Austrian nuclear physicist. During World War II, he worked on the German nuclear energy project, also known as the Uranium Club; he did research on the inelastic dispersion of fast neutrons in uranium. After the war, he taught and did nuclear research at the University of Vienna. He was a full member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Education

From 1936 to 1940, Lintner studied physics at the Universität Wien. He received his doctorate in 1940, under Georg Stetter.

Career

From 1941, Lintner was a teaching assistant to Georg Stetter at the Universität Wien. During World War II, Lintner worked on a team headed by Georg Stetter, a principal working on the German nuclear energy project, also known as the Uranverein. Stetter led a group of six physicists and physical chemists in measuring atomic constants and neutron cross sections, as well as investigating transuranic elements; in 1943, Stetter held the unified directorship of the Institut für Neutronenforschung, the II. Physikalische Institut and the Institut für Neutronenforschung. Lintner did research on the inelastic dispersion of fast neutrons in uranium.
From 1945, Lintner was an assistant at the II. Physikalische Institut der Wiener Universität, under Eduard Haschek, Karl Przibram, and Erich Schmid. From 1949, he was a Privatdozent at the University. Around 1959, he was a titular ausserordentlicher Professor there, and later an ordentlicher Professor. He was a full member of the Section for Mathematics and the Natural Sciences of the Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften

Classified reports

The following are cited as Geheimberichte on German nuclear research from the period 1939 to 1945 and which are being held in the Stadtarchiv Haigerloch: