Friedrich Hecht

Austrian chemist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustrian chemist
PlacesAustria
wasChemist Writer Educator
Work fieldAcademia Literature Science
Gender
Male
Birth3 August 1903, Vienna, Austria
Death8 March 1980Vienna, Austria (aged 76 years)
Politics:Nazi Party
The details

Biography

Friedrich Hecht (3 August 1903, Vienna – 8 March 1980, Vienna) was an Austrian chemist and writer.

Hecht studied chemistry at the University of Vienna, and in 1928 was awarded a PhD. He was an assistant at the Institute of Chemistry. He wrote science fiction under the pseudonym Manfred Langrenus. In 1980, he died in Vienna, Austria.

Even before the Anschluss, in 1933 Hecht was a member of the (then illegal) National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSGWP) or Nazi Party and Sturmabteilung or SA, from 1934, the Schutzstaffel or SS.

In 1938, Hecht moved to the Analytical Department of the University of Vienna and achieved habilitation there in 1941. From 1943 to 1950 he was Professor of Microchemistry and Geochemistry at the Graz University of Technology. From 1959-1973, he was Associate Professor of Analytical Chemistry and head of the Analytical Institute in Vienna. At Vienna, Hecht was assisted by Edith Kroupa.

In 1938, Hecht received the Fritz Pregl Prize for distinguished achievements in chemistry by the Austrian Academy of Sciences.

Novels

  • Reich im Mond (Empire in the Moon). Utopian scientific novel of the near future and distant past millions of years, 1951 (new edition in 1958 as Empire in the Moon. Utopian scientific novel.)
  • Im Banne des Alpha Centauri (Under the Spell of the Alpha Centauri). Roman, 1955.
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