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Wooster physicist Niklas Manz goes beyond his discipline to study how phenomena get their names

Niklas Manz, associate professor of physics

Niklas Manz, associate professor of physics at 69直播, studies the Belousov鈥揨habotinsky reaction, but why was it named for those two scientists, instead of one or instead of six or seven? Manz was curious. His interest in how discoveries get their eponyms, the people or person they are named for, resulted in two recently published papers outside of his normal field.

Most have heard of Einstein鈥檚 theory of relativity, Newton鈥檚 law of gravity, Parkinson鈥檚 disease, and many more, but hundreds of more obscure phenomena are also named after their discoverers, and one of the first things Manz found is that in recent decades, the names have been getting longer.

鈥淒ifferent fields have different thresholds,鈥 he said, and in recent decades, the thresholds have been getting lower in every field, so that discoveries may now carry the names of five or six researchers. Because scientists want their information condensed, he notes, the eponym often gets abbreviated, so the Belousov鈥揨habotinsky reaction becomes the BZ reaction or the Fisher鈥揔olmogorov鈥揚etrovsky鈥揚iskunov equation becomes FKPP equation.

Manz eventually split his research into two papers. , traces the history of the BZ reaction鈥檚 eponym. , published in Scientometrics, looks at the broader question of how scientific discoveries get their names and what the threshold is to be included.

Much of the early research on the BZ reaction was published in Russian journals, and transliteration into the Western alphabet introduced many variations on names. Manz worked with Zach Rewinski, formerly assistant professor of Russian studies at the College as a co-author on the Chaos publication. For the Scientometrics article, he collaborated with the College鈥檚 science librarian.

鈥淲orking outside our own departments is sometimes really necessary,鈥 Manz said, 鈥渁nd it鈥檚 great that it鈥檚 possible.鈥 At a big university the two might never meet, he said, but at Wooster, 鈥淚 just went to his office and asked if he was interested in joining the project.鈥

BZ Reaction illustration by Tara Brunner 鈥24

Belousov鈥揨habotinsky Reaction illustration by Tara Brunner 鈥24

Wooster鈥檚 other cross-disciplinary contribution to Manz鈥檚 Chaos paper was the illustration, created by Tara Brunner 鈥24. 鈥淚鈥檓 creative in the lab, but not visually creative,鈥 Manz said, so he contacted the art department and was connected with Brunner to create a visual spiral of all the names that have been associated with the BZ reaction.

As a physicist, Manz studies reaction-diffusion waves. The BZ reaction is a chemical system, but its wave properties are useful to a physicist and present yet another opportunity to reach across disciplines. 鈥淚 have Petri dishes and pipettes in my lab,鈥 Manz said, 鈥渂ut I try to tell physics majors that chemists use a lot of physics, and I鈥檓 using chemistry to investigate physical properties.鈥

Manz鈥檚 sabbatical leave in 2024 made it possible for him to do the deep dive into scientific literature that was required for the two papers. 鈥淚t was a completely different part of my brain,鈥 he said, comparing the work to his usual research focus. In whatever field, he appreciates the opportunities that he gets at Wooster to stretch himself. 鈥淚 like research, but I also like teaching,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 not possible at a big university in the same way.鈥

Posted in Faculty, News on August 26, 2025.