Allvar
Gullstrand, eldest son
of Dr. Pehr Alfred Gullstrand, Principal Municipal
Medical Officer, and his wife Sofia Mathilda née Korsell, was
born on June 5, 1862, at Landskrona. He was educated at schools in Landskrona
and Jönköping, where
he passed his matriculation in 1880; he then
went to Uppsala University, which he left in 1885, and spent a year at Vienna,
afterwards continuing his medical studies at Stockholm where he graduated in
medicine in 1888, presented his doctorate thesis in 1890, and was appointed
Lecturer in Ophthalmology in 1891. After holding various appointments as Doctor
and Lecturer and serving on the Swedish Medical Board, he was appointed the
first Professor of Ophthalmology at Uppsala University in 1894.
He occupied this post until 1913. As from 1914 onwards he held a Personal Professorship
in Physical and Physiological Optics at Uppsala University. He was appointed
Emeritus Professor in 1927.
He was entirely self-taught in the fields covering his most important work (geometric
and physiological optics). The basis of the science he developed was laid in
1890 in his thesis Bidrag till astigmatismens teori (Contribution to
the theory of astigmatism). The complete proof of this theory is found in the
following three works: Allgemeine Theorie der monochromatischen Aberrationen
und ihre nächsten Ergebnisse für die Ophthalmologie (General theory
of monochromatic aberrations and their immediate significance for ophthalmology),
1900, which received awards from the
Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences and the
Swedish Medical Association; Die reelle optische Abbildung (The true
optical image), 1906; and Die optische Abbildung in heterogenen Medien und
die Dioptrik der Kristallinse des Menschen (The optical image in heterogeneous
media and the dioptrics of the
human crystalline lens), 1908, which was awarded
the Centenary Gold Medal of the Swedish Medical Association. The results are
combined in the works Tatsachen und Fiktionen in der Lehre von der optischen
Abbildung (Facts and
fictions in the theory of the optical image), 1907;
Handbuch der physiologischen Optik (Handbook of physiological optics),
by H. von Helmholtz, 3rd edition, Vol. I, 1909, and Einführung in die
Methoden der Dioptrik der Augen des Menschen (Introduction to the methods
of the dioptrics of the human eyes), 1911.
Of his other works, the following received awards: Objektive Differential-diagnostik
und photographische Abbildung von Augenmuskellähmungen (The objective
differential diagnosis and photographic illustration of disabilities of the
eye muscles), 1892; Photographisch-ophthalmometrische und klinische Untersuchungen
über die Hornhautrefraktion (Photographic-ophthalmometric and - Biography Gullstrand story sex Allvar farm Biography free - teen panties Gullstrand Allvar Biography Allvar - incest Gullstrand porn Gullstrand Allvar Ýëåêòðîäâèãàòåëü - Biography ÀÈÐ ñàá ñòîéêè ðàçíîå ò è Biography ïîä êîðîáà - ïðîñòàâêè Gullstrand Allvar ñàëîíó îïîðû ïî ä clinical
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refractions), 1896; Die Farbe der Macula centralis
retinae (The pigments of the
central macula of the retina), 1905; the first
two received awards from the Swedish Medical Association and the latter received
the Björkén Prize of the Uppsala Faculty of Medicine.
As the holder of the Research Professorship in Physical and Physiological Optics,
Gullstrand devoted himself mainly to calculations and methods for achieving
a more suitable form of refracting surfaces in optical instruments, and to investigation
of optical system laws of higher order. A result of the former is a record which
is kept in the Uppsala University library and which relates to calculations
for optical systems, inter alia optical systems with appropriate non-spherical
surfaces, and the publication Über asphärische Flächen in
optischen Instrumenten (On aspheric surfaces in optical instruments), 1919.
As a result of the latter we may
mention the publications Das allgemeine
optische Abbildungssystem (The general optical image system), 1915 and Optische
Systemgesetze zweiter und dritter Ordnung (Laws of the optical system of
the second and third order), 1924. He gave the last summary of his optical experiments
in Einiges über optische Bilder (Some aspects of optical images),
1926.
His methods of focal illumination,
particularly by means of the slit lamp (1911),
have acquired the greatest importance to the practical ophthalmologist. His
reflex-free ophthalmoscope (1911) is also a valuable instrument to the ophthalmological
diagnostician.
His great administrative ability found
expression particularly in the Faculty
of Medicine and the Council of Uppsala University and the Swedish Academy of
Sciences.
Gullstrand was an honorary Doctor of
Philosophy of the Universities of Uppsala,
Jena and Dublin, and a member of a number of Swedish and foreign scientific
societies. In 1911 he received the
Nobel Prize for his work on the dioptrics
of the eye. He was member of the Nobel Physics Committee of the Swedish Academy
of Sciences (1911-1929), and its Chairman (1922-1929). In 1927 he was awarded
the Graefe Medal of the Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesellschaft.
In 1885 he married Signe Christina Breitholtz. They had one daughter, who died
at an early age. Gullstrand
died in Stockholm on July 28, 1930.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1967
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.