During his Greifswald years Mie worked on the computation of scattering of an
electromagnetic wave by a homogeneous dielectric sphere, which was published in 1908 under the title of "Contributions to the optics of turbid media, particularly of colloidal metal solutions" in
Annalen der Physik. The term
Mie scattering is still related to his name. Using
Maxwell's electromagnetic theory applied to spherical
gold particles Mie provided a theoretical treatment of
plasmon resonance absorption of gold
colloids. The sharp absorption bands depend on the particle size and explain the change in colour that occurs as the size of the colloid
nanoparticles is increased from 20 to 1600 nm. He wrote further important contributions to
electromagnetism and also to
relativity theory. In addition he was employed on measurements units and finally developed his Mie system of units in 1910 with the basic units
volt,
ampere,
coulomb and
second (VACS-system). In 1912 and 1913 Mie published the first attempt at a
unified theory of matter in the 20th century. His motivation was to explain the "invisible" electron and relate gravitation to matter; his theory had three core assumptions: 1) electrical and magnetic fields exist inside of electrons, 2) special relativity, and 3) new states of ether would be sufficient to explain all phenomenon of the material world. ==Honors==