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Notable Chemists & Physicists Posters & Prints, pg 3/5
for science classrooms, laboratories, home schoolers.
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educational posters > science > chemistry & physics | chemists & physicists 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 < philosophers
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Notable chemists and physicists posters, prints and curriculum enrichment resources: James Prescott Joule, Lord Kelvin, Antoine Lavoisier, Frank Libby, Joseph Lister, Murray Gell-Mann, Guglielmo Marconi, James Clerk Maxwell, Maria Goeppert-Mayer, Alfred Nobel, Georg Simon Ohm, Heike Kamerlingh Onnes, J. Robert Oppenheimer; study the atomic level of matter, physics with the physical universe made up of matter.
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James Prescott Joule
b. 12-24-1818; Lancashire, England
d. 10-11-1889
Joule was the English physicist who discovered the relationship between heat, electricity and mechanical work. The International System of Units (SI) derived unit of energy, the joule, is named after him, and Joule's laws concerning the flow of current through a resistance and the heat dissipated. He also worked with Lord Kelvin to develop the absolute scale of temperature.
• Biography of James Prescott Joule
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SCIENCE:
PHYSICS & CHEMISTRY |
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Sir William Thomson, Lord Kelvin
b. 6-26-1824; Ireland
d. 12-17-1907
William Thomson was an engineer, inventor who was knighted given the title Lord Kelvin for his achievements which included more than 600 scientific papers, 70 patents and critical input in the laying of the transatlantic cable. The temperature measurement (Kelvin scale) is named for him. He is also remembered for grossly underestimating the age of the Earth, that making the statements that "Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible," (1895) and the "Radio has no future," (1897).
• Lord Kelvin and the Age of the Earth
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Antoine Lavoisier & Marie-Anne Pierette Lavoisier
b. 8-26-1743; Paris
d. 5-8-1794; beheaded in the French Revolution
Antoine Lavoisier, a chemist and biologist, was also involved in the financial and economic administration of pre-revolutionary France, for which he was beheaded.
As a scientist Lavoisier worked on the law of conservation of mass, recognized (and named) oxygen (1778) and hydrogen (1783), introduced the metric system, listed the elements. His wife Marie-Anne Lavoisier was his constant assistant and noted scientist in her own right.
• Antoine Lavoisier: Father of Chemistry
• women scientists
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Willard Frank Libby
b. 12-17-1908; Colorado
d. 9-8-1980
Libby, a physical chemist, worked on the Manhattan Project on developing the atomic bomb.
He was awarded the 1960 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for radiocarbon dating, which was important to the study of archaeology.
• Life Work of Noble Laureate Willard Frank Libby
• Radiocarbon Dating
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Sir Joseph Lister
b. 4-5-1827; England
d. 2-10-1912
Joseph Lister was a surgeon who successfully introduced preventing infections with the sterilization of surgical instruments and wounds. (Florence Nightengale, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., and Ignaz Semmelweis were important advocates of cleanliness in health care and what would come to be know as antisepic practices.) Listerine mouthwash is named after Lister.
• Joseph Lister and the Story of Antiseptics
• health care posters
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Murray Gell-Mann
b. 9-15-1929; New York
Gell-Mann is a physicist whose work involved elementary particles, quantum number, quark model, and the study of complexity.
Murray Gell-Mann was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics, 1969.
• The Eightfold Way
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Guglielmo Marconi, Italian Inventor, Depicted with Some of His Radio Telegraph Apparatus, Giclee Print
b. 4-25-1874; Italy
d. 7-20-1937
1909 Nobel Prize in Physics with Karl Ferdinand Braun.
• Guglielmo Marconi and Radio Waves
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James Clerk Maxwell
b. 11-13-1831; Edinburgh, Scotland
d. 8-13-1910; Cambridge
James Clerk Maxwell was a mathematician and theoretical physicist noted for his equations in electricity, magnetism and inductance; and laying the foundations for the 20th century fields of special relativity and quantum mechanics. He also made the first true color photographs.
• The Man Who Changed Everything: The Life of James Clerk Maxwell
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Maria Goeppert-Mayer
b. 6-28-1906, Silesia
d. 2-20-1972, San Diego, CA
Maria Goeppert-Mayer, a German born American physicist, was awared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963 for the nuclear shell model of the atomic nucleus. She is only the second woman to win the Nobel physics prize, the other was Marie Curie.
• Maria Goeppert Mayer: Physicist
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Dmitry Ivanovich Mendeleyev
b. 2-8-1834; Siberia
d. 2-2-1907; St. Petersburg
Dmitry Ivanovich Mendeleyev was a chemist and inventor credited with the first version of the periodic table of elements where he predicted the properties of elements yet to be discovered.
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Alfred Nobel
b. 10-21-1833; Sweden
d. 12-10-1896; Italy
• Nobel Peace Prize posters
• Alfred Nobel: Inventive Thinker
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Georg Simon Ohm
b. 3-16-1789; Bavaria
d. 7-6-1854
Ohm, a physicist and high school teacher, researched the electrochemical cell (battery) invented by Count Volta (voltage). The result of his experiments was the beginning of electrial circuit analysis. The ohm, the SI unit of electrical impedance or resistance is named after Ohm.
• The galvanic circuit investigated mathematically by Georg Simon Ohm
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Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
b. 9-21-1853; The Netherlands
d. 2-21-1926
Physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes was the first to liquify helium (1908), at the time the lowest temperature on Earth, and in 1911 described the new state of "superconductivity".
Onnes was awarded the 1913 Nobel Prize in Physics for "his investigations on the properties of matter at low temperatures which led, inter alia, to the production of liquid helium".
• The galvanic circuit investigated mathematically by Georg Simon Ohm
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J. Robert Oppenheimer
b. 4-22-1904; New York City
d. 2-18-1967; Princeton, NJ
The first atomic bomb was built by a team of scientist headed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer.
In 1965 Oppenheimer, in an interview about the Trinity test, the first nuclear explosion, recalled "We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried. Most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita; Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.' I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.'"
FYI - Oppenheimer chose the name 'Trinity' from poet John Donne's Holy Sonnets.
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