Find the word definition

Crossword clues for bohm

Wiktionary
bohm

n. (surname)

Wikipedia
Bohm

Bohm may refer to:

  • Bohm (surname)
  • Aharonov–Bohm effect
  • Bohm sheath criterion, see Debye sheath
  • Bohm Dialogue
  • Bohm diffusion
  • Bohm interpretation
Böhm

Böhm is a German surname, meaning Bohemian. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Carl Crack (born Carl Böhm)
  • Annett Böhm, (born 1980), German judoka
  • Corbinian Böhm, (born 1966), German artist
  • Corrado Böhm, Italian computer scientist
  • Eduard von Böhm-Ermolli, Austrian general of World War I
  • Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Austrian economist
  • Franz Böhm, (1895-1977), German politician and jurist
  • Fritz Böhm (born 1980), German film producer
  • Georg Böhm, German Baroque composer and organist
  • Gottfried Böhm, German architect
  • Hans Böhm (Drummer of Niklashausen), shepherd, drummer and preacher
  • Joseph Böhm, Austrian violinist and teacher
  • Joseph Edgar Böhm, sculptor
  • Karl Böhm, (1894-1981), Austrian conductor
  • Karlheinz Böhm, (1928-2014), Austrian actor
  • Katharina Böhm, (born 1964), Austrian actress and daughter of Karlheinz Böhm
  • Theobald Böhm, (1794-1881), German inventor and musician
    • Boehm system, his fingering system for flute
Bohm (surname)

Bohm is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Carl Bohm (1844–1920), German songwriter and composer
  • David Bohm (1917–1992), American theoretical physicist
  • Dorothy Bohm (born 1924), Königsberg-born British photographer
  • Elisabeth Bohm (1843–1914), Russian artist
  • Jack Bohm, US Brigadier General

Category:German-language surnames

Usage examples of "bohm".

More recently, physicist David Bohm referred to it as the primary order of the universe, which is implicate, enfolded, harboring our reality in much the same way as the DNA in the nucleus of a cell harbors potential life and directs its unfolding.

The most exciting research in physics today is the investigation of what physicist David Bohm calls "quantum interconnectedness," or nonlocal correlations.

This surprising coherence between distant entities is called "nonlocality" by Bell, Bohm, Clauser, and others.

In the holographic universe of David Bohm, there is a unity of consciousness - a "greater collective mind" - with no boundaries of space or time.

Others may have seen Venice by moonlight, or heard the Vicar’s daughter recite “Little Jim,” but the favoured few who have been present when Bohm and I were collaborating are the ones who have really lived.

Another cemetery, other makers of tombstones: Beutz & Kranich, Pottgiesser, natural stones, Bohm, mortuary art, Gockeln, mortuary gardening and landscaping.