Otto Berg (scientist)
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Otto Berg | |
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Photo of Otto Berg | |
| Born | November 23, 1874 Berlin |
| Died | 1939 (aged 64–65) England |
| Occupation | scientist |
Otto Berg (23 November 1874[1] – 1939) was a German scientist. He is one of the scientists credited with discovering rhenium, the last element to be discovered having a stable isotope.
Berg was born in Berlin as the son of the merchant Philipp Berg and his wife Jenny. From 1894 to 1898, Berg studied chemistry in Berlin, Heidelberg and Freiburg; in Freiburg he worked as an assistant at the Institute of Physics. In 1900, he married Julie Zuntz, a daughter of physiologist Nathan Zuntz; the couple had four children.[2] Between 1902 and 1911, he was a Privatdozent in Greifswald. He then became a partner at Siemens & Halske in Berlin-Charlottenburg.[3] After the Nazi seizure of power he lost his job at Siemens in 1933 because of his Jewish descent, subsequently in 1938 he fled with his family to England, where he died in 1939.[4]