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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 16:01:03 GMT
Pretty sure this is wrong but Watt? Nope. I feel bad saying no to everyone. Someone get it soon please!
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Mar 1, 2018 16:35:34 GMT
Pretty sure this is wrong but Watt? Nope. I feel bad saying no to everyone. Someone get it soon please! I feel bad too but I looked up Wiki for SI Units. This question might help if the said SI Unit is the obscure one I saw. Does the SI unit statt with a 'C'?
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 17:17:42 GMT
It doesn't start with C. Should I put anymore hints?
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 18:39:40 GMT
It doesn't start with C. Should I put anymore hints? Yes, I 've considered every 19th century scientist I know and cared about electricity, but I still get a "no"…
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 18:40:50 GMT
Nope. I feel bad saying no to everyone. Someone get it soon please! I feel bad too but I looked up Wiki for SI Units. This question might help if the said SI Unit is the obscure one I saw. Does the SI unit statt with a 'C'? Coulomb was French anyway.
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 19:44:45 GMT
This man's work, because he was limited by what he express mathematically, was later included in one of James Clerk Maxwell's four fundamental equations of Electromagnetism.
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 20:27:59 GMT
This man's work, because he was limited by what he express mathematically, was later included in one of James Clerk Maxwell's four fundamental equations of Electromagnetism. Hertz! It must be Hertz!
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 22:25:03 GMT
Not him. More hints: He discovered electromagnetic induction. He developed a device which protects you from being shocked by electricity if you are in this device (because charge remains on the outer surface of a conductor). The SI unit of Capacitance is named after him.
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 22:28:17 GMT
Not him. More hints: He discovered electromagnetic induction. He developed a device which protects you from being shocked by electricity if you are in this device (because charge remains on the outer surface of a conductor). The SI unit of Capacitance is named after him. Faraday?
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 22:32:28 GMT
Ding Ding Ding!!!!!!! We have a winner!
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 22:42:04 GMT
This is an easy one:
The King who signed Magna Carta (England)
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 22:43:58 GMT
King John, fourth son of Henry II.
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Mar 1, 2018 22:47:46 GMT
King John, fourth son of Henry II. Maybe it was too easy, lol.
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Post by John Cameron of Fassiefern on Mar 1, 2018 22:54:30 GMT
Maybe. I also recently read a book about the English monarchs, so it was a lucky question for me! New question: Which scientist developed the wavefunction equations for atomic orbitals, which was inspired by de Broglie's idea of an electron as a two dimensional standing wave? Hint, this man was not included among any of your guesses for my previous question. His name is often associated with a certain paradox.
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Post by Nobunaga Oda on Mar 1, 2018 23:02:38 GMT
Maybe. I also recently read a book about the English monarchs, so it was a lucky question for me! New question: Which scientist developed the wavefunction equations for atomic orbitals, which was inspired by de Broglie's idea of an electron as a two dimensional standing wave? Hint, this man was not included among any of your guesses for my previous question. His name is often associated with a certain paradox. Schroedinger? (Can't spell his name right)
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