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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Feb 28, 2018 16:07:18 GMT
No to all three.
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Feb 28, 2018 23:01:33 GMT
The new question: An scientist in the 19th century, this person made many important discoveries in the field of electricity and magnetism, despite starting his education quite late in his life (therefore he used visual models more often than mathematical models). He has an SI unit named after himself. Ampere?
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Feb 28, 2018 23:10:14 GMT
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 1:35:35 GMT
Nope.
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Post by Tamon Yamaguchi on Mar 1, 2018 1:36:45 GMT
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 5:42:15 GMT
He was English. One of his major breakthroughs concerned the idea of the electric field. There is a certain device named after him.
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Post by Tamon Yamaguchi on Mar 1, 2018 5:46:26 GMT
He was English. One of his major breakthroughs concerned the idea of the electric field. There is a certain device named after him. Kelvin?
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 5:52:17 GMT
Incorrect.
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Post by Tamon Yamaguchi on Mar 1, 2018 5:58:27 GMT
Dammit! Don't say it's Isaac Newton...
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 6:11:47 GMT
Nope! Isaac Newton was dead before the 19th century.
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Post by Tamon Yamaguchi on Mar 1, 2018 7:36:14 GMT
Nope! Isaac Newton was dead before the 19th century. I know lol, but there's a SI unit named after him. If there's some guy named William Gram, kill me plox EDIT: Is it Volta?
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 12:46:17 GMT
He was English. One of his major breakthroughs concerned the idea of the electric field. There is a certain device named after him. Joule?
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Mar 1, 2018 14:18:10 GMT
He was English. One of his major breakthroughs concerned the idea of the electric field. There is a certain device named after him. Pretty sure this is wrong but Watt?
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 15:59:37 GMT
I know lol, but there's a SI unit named after him. If there's some guy named William Gram, kill me plox EDIT: Is it Volta? Nope. I've never heard of a William Gram, though! I don't know how those units originated.
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 16:00:14 GMT
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