Pupin, Mihajlo (Source, Pancevo, Serbia, 4. ⅹ 1854 – New York, ⅹⅰⅰ 1935) – Physicist, Order. Prof. After Mathematical Physics at Columbia University in New York. No funds in 1874. He arrived in the United States. He worked and graduated and graduated (1883) at the then Columbia College. He specialized in Cambridge and Berlin and PhD (1889) at Helmholz with a study of osmotic pressure and his connection with free energy. The biggest discovery is Puponian coils, which allowed a telephone connection of long distances. He was a remarkable lecturer, and two of his PhD students became Nobel’s laureates (Miliken and Langrmour). He played a significant role in the formation of the borders of Yugoslavia in 1918. In the assistance he sent for his homeland, a special part was for Macedonia. He was president of the New York Academy of Sciences and one of the founders of the company of US physicists. For the autobiographical work “from an immigrant to finder,” he is awarded with the Pulitzer Prize (1924). The Columbia University Laboratory brings his name and is declared a historic monument of the United States. BIB. From an emigrant to the inventor. Preface, translation and newsroom Kostadinka Mladenovska, Skopje, 1999. Lit.: Prof. Dr. Paul Mitreski, Mihajlo Idovski Pupine for Macedonia, Bitola, 1995. V. Ur.
Original article in Macedonian language Cyrillic alphabet
Кириличен напис ПУПИН, Михајло