Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Roentgen Wilhelm Conrad

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 90    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Roentgen Wilhelm Conrad:     more books (34)
  1. Hochschullehrer (Straßburg): Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, Albert Schweitzer, Ferdinand Braun, Georg Dehio, Bernhard Naunyn, Adolf Von Baeyer (German Edition)
  2. Maschinenbauingenieur: Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, Carl Benz, Johann Andreas Schubert, Hartmut Mehdorn, Eugen Kittel, Erich Gröner (German Edition)
  3. Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Sue Rabbitt Roff, 2000
  4. Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen: Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, Universitätsklinikum Gießen Und Marburg (German Edition)
  5. Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen und die Geschichte der Röntgenstrahlen. by Otto. [Röntgen] GLASSER, 1931-01-01
  6. Nature. A Weekly Illustrated Journal of Science. 1891-1901. by Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, 1891-01-01
  7. New Kind of Rays (German Edition) by Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, 1972-12
  8. X-rays and Electric Conductivity of Gases (Alembic Club Reprints.) by Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen,
  9. On a New Kind of Rays [ X-Rays] by Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen [ Roentgen ], 1896
  10. The Life of Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, Discoverer of the X Ray by W. Robert Nitske, 1971
  11. DOCUMENTS OF WILHELM CONRAD ROENTGEN. Facsimiles of documents under the referenc by Schleussner, 1959-01-01
  12. University of Zurich Faculty: Albert Einstein, Peter Debye, Wilhelm Röntgen, Theodor Mommsen, Conrad Bursian, Lorenz Oken, Albert A. Bühlmann
  13. Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen and the early history of the Roentgen rays, by Otto Glasser, 1934
  14. Wilhelm Conrad Rntgen and the Early History of the Roentgen Rays. With a Chapter by Otto. GLASSER, 1934

21. Röntgen, Wilhelm Conrad
Röntgen, wilhelm conrad,. Röntgen also spelled roentgen (b. March 27, 1845, Lennep,Prussia now physicist who was a recipient of the first nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/509_85.html
Historia-Photo Nobel Prize for Physics , in 1901, for his discovery of X rays , which heralded the age of modern physics and revolutionized diagnostic medicine.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Otto Glasser, (1933, reissued 1993; originally published in German, 1931), focuses on the scientific events of 1856. W. Robert Nitske, (1971), treats the personal and public aspects of his life.

22. The Voice Of Russia [ XX CENTURY: FOOTPRINTS IN HISTORY ]
was seeing the global significance of his discovery, wilhelm conrad roentgen neverreally thought about patents or money. Apart form his nobel laureateship, he
http://www.vor.ru/English/Footprints/excl_next828_eng.html
WILHELM CONRAD ROENTGEN
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen’s discovery of X-rays in 1895 literally turned around the world of modern physics and diagnostic medicine. The X-rays, also known as Roentgen rays, easily passed through various substances that are opaque to ordinary light, affected photographic plates and have since been widely used in the study of internal disorders and structural analysis of new materials and the hereditary principles of DNA. This crucial discovery earned Roentgen the first Nobel Prize for physics prompting the prophesy made by Swedish Academy’s Carl Odhner, who said the physical science will move far ahead when this new form of energy is effectively harnessed. Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen was born at Lennep, Prussia, on March 27, 1845, the only son of a prosperous textile merchant. Three years later the family moved to Apeldorn in the Netherlands where his mother’s parents then lived. The long trips the little boy took in the nearby woods forever instilled in him an undying love for the wildlife. At the age of 17, Wilhelm Conrad entered a technical school in Utrecht but was quickly expelled for refusing to report on a friend who had lampooned a hated teacher. Denied formal enrolment at a university for the lack of an official school graduation certificate, he was still allowed to attended courses at Utrecht University as a freelancer but his main education he received at a technology institute in Zurich where, influenced by the prominent physicist August Krundt, he focused on physics.

23. Cats In Space: Notable Humans
roentgen, wilhelm conrad (18451923). presented by Nikita La Femme.German physicist, the first nobel laureate in physics. roentgen
http://catsinspace.com/notable/note6.shtml
This Month's Mission! Announcements Mysterious Places and Unusual Phenomena Cats in Space Museum Space Station Alpha-1 Space Station Twin Brook Shelter Page Skywatch Science News Forecast Zine Experiments Ranks of Members and Current Awards Previous Awards and Badges Space Library Important Science Humans Sci-Fi and More Sci-Fi Book Nook Our Amazon Links Member CIS Pages CIS Home Page CindyDrew Home Page
ROENTGEN, Wilhelm Conrad
presented by Nikita La Femme
German physicist, the first Nobel laureate in physics.
      Roentgen was born in Lennep (now part of Remscheid) and educated at the University of Zürich. In November 1895 he reported the discovery of short-wave radiations that he called X rays. Subsequently these rays were given his name, but Roentgen rays are still popularly known as X rays.
    His great discovery revolutionized physics and medicine, and he also received the Rumford Medal of the Royal Society of London in 1896, and the first Nobel Prize in physics in 1901. He also made discoveries in mechanics, heat, and electricity. answers:
1- Umpire and catcher
2- women boxers
3-the surgeon was the boy's Mother
4-name, mane, amen, mean

24. Campus-germany.de - Estudiar En Wurzburgo Un Premio Nobel Sin
Translate this page No solamente wilhelm conrad roentgen obtuvo el premio nobel, también sus sucesoreswilhelm Wien y Johannes Stark, así como los químicos Emil Fischer y
http://www.campusgermany.de/spanish/4.30.3.1974.html

25. Wilhelm Roentgen - Top Biography
point in experimental physics as wilhelm conrad roentgen discovered ‘X Althoughroentgen was subjected to some bitter including the first ever nobel Prize for
http://www.top-biography.com/9072-Wilhelm Roentgen/index1.htm
Screen Saver Wallpaper How to Buy Our Products Screen Saver Wallpaper How to Buy Our Products ... Success

26. X-rays & Wilhelm Roentgen - Top Biography
they were invented and even today modern world is highly indebted to its discoverer,and rightly so, the first ever nobel Prize winner wilhelm conrad roentgen.
http://www.top-biography.com/9072-Wilhelm Roentgen/xray.htm
"The University is a nursery of scientific research and of mental education, a place for cultivation of ideals for students as well as for teachers. Its significance as such, is much greater than its practical values…. Every genuine scientist… is an idealist in the best sense of the word…" said Roentgen. the secretary of the Wurzburg Physical and Medical Society, entitled "ueber line new Art yon strahlen", i.e. On A New Kind Of Rays. He added a footnote in that paper, which read : "to differentiate them from others," he had named them as 'X'–rays. Screen Saver Wallpaper How to Buy Our Products ... Success

27. Sci-Philately - A Selective History Of Science On Stamps
wilhelm conrad roentgen (18451923) worked with cathode ray tubes and chemoluminescence radiationwhich he called X-rays, and received the first nobel prize in
http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/units/sel/exhibits/stamps/modphys1.html
MODERN PHYSICS PART I
In the words of physicist Philip Morrison, "twentieth-century physics began about five years ahead of the century itself." The discovery of X-rays by Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen and Henri Becquerel's investigations of phosphorescent salts that fogged photographic plates whether or not they had been exposed to light ushered in the era of modern physics. Becquerel did not immediately realize that a previously unknown type of energy caused his so-called uranium rays - what Marie and Pierre Curie would call "radioactivity." Roentgen and the Curies appear on stamps from many countries around the world, whereas Bequerel did not capture the popular imagination, nor the attention of other than French postal authorities who decide whom to commemorate.
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen (1845-1923) worked with cathode ray tubes and chemoluminescence. He discovered an invisible yet highly penetrating radiation which he called X-rays, and received the first Nobel prize in physics as a result. "Modern physics" had its beginning here. The year 1995, the centenary of his discovery, brought forth a spate of stamps from diverse countries, many of which show the striking skeletal image of Roentgen's wife's hand, with ring. Forever associated with radiology, and the medical applications of X-rays, Roentgen and his cathode ray tube have appeared on earlier issues as well.
Antoine Henri Becquerel (1852-1919) ( Detail ) was a French physicist whose research led him to the study of fluorescence in minerals. He discovered radioactivity when studying uranium compounds, which, unlike other fluorescent substances, fogged photographic plates even without having been exposed to strong light. He shared a Nobel prize for his discovery with Pierre and Marie Curie in 1903.

28. FÍSICA - DONA FIFI - 100 Anos De Nobel - Roentgen
Translate this page wilhelm conrad roentgen descobriu os raios-X no final de 1895, quando já tinha bons50 anos de idade. Em 1901, ganhou o primeiro prêmio nobel de Física por
http://www.fisica.ufc.br/donafifi/nobel100/nobel1.htm

29. FÍSICA - 100 Anos De Nobel - Prêmios De Física
Translate this page LISTA DOS NOBELISTAS DE FÍSICA, NOTA O prêmio deixou de ser concedido emalguns anos. 1901 - wilhelm conrad roentgen Pela descoberta dos raios-X.
http://www.fisica.ufc.br/donafifi/nobel100/nobel8.htm

30. WILHELM CONRAD ROENTGEN 1845
Translate this page wilhelm conrad roentgen cerca del instituto de Física de la Tres semanas despuésroentgen difundieron la noticia de su asignado el primer premio nobel por la
http://www.akisrx.com/spagnolo/htm/roentgen.htm

31. WILHELM CONRAD ROENTGEN 1845
wilhelm conrad Röntgen near the institute of Physics of the Three weeks later spreadRoentgen the news of his he/she was assigned him the first nobel prize for
http://www.akisrx.com/inglese/htm/roentgen.htm

32. History
Radiology Centennial or about wilhelm conrad roentgen and the Australian roentgenCentenary University of Sydney; Medical nobel Prizes for Research Involving X
http://web.wn.net/~usr/ricter/web/roentgen.html
The Roentgen Centennial
In 1895, Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen's discovery of x-rays in this laboratory revolutionized science and medicine but did you know that x-rays may have been produced by William Morgan, a Welsh mathematician, more than a century before Roentgen's discovery?
In 1785, Morgan was conducting experiments on electrical discharges in a vacuum when he noted that "according to the length of time during which the mercury was boiled, the 'electric' light turned violet, then purple, then a beautiful green...and then the light became invisible." Morgan's experiment was witnessed by American diplomat Benjamin Franklin, a fellow investigator in electrical phenomena.
Within months of their discovery, x-rays proved their usefulness as a diagnostic and therapeutic tool in medicine. X-rays allowed physicians their first non-invasive look inside the human body. Using the equipment pictured above Roentgen was able to produce this radiograph of his wife's hand after an exposure of more than 30 minutes. Less than a month later, in January 1896, Lindenthal produced the first contrast-enhanced radiograph of the veins of the hand. In March 1896, Pupin became the first to use the intensifying screen, without which most common radiologic exams would be impossible. In June 1896, only 6 months after Roentgen announced his discovery, x-rays were being used by battlefield physicians to locate bullets in wounded soldiers.

33. X - Rays.
wilhelm conrad roentgen was the director of the Physical institute in Wuerzburgin roentgen was rewarded for his invention with nobel prize for
http://www.quido.cz/objevy/rentgen.a.htm

34. G?aµµat?s?µa ?a? F?s?
nobel prize anniversary, Guyana, 1996, Johannes Kepler (15711630), Hungary, 1980. StepanovichPopov (1859-1906), Russia, 1995, wilhelm conrad roentgen (1845-1923
http://www.geocities.com/grphysics/stamps.html

35. Wilhelm Roentgen
1. wilhelm conrad roentgen. alman fizikçi. nobel fizik ödülünü alanilk kisi. (oztokyolu, 28.07.2001 1711) 2. katot isinlari
http://sozluk.sourtimes.org/show.asp?t=wilhelm roentgen

36. APS News Online - This Month In Physics History
Few scientific breakthroughs have had as immediate an impact as wilhelm conrad roentgen'sdiscovery of Xrays roentgen was awarded the first nobel Prize in
http://www.aps.org/apsnews/1101/110105.html
NOVEMBER 2001 ISSUE
comments or questions? email
apsnews
email
webmaster
November 8, 1895: Roentgen's Discovery of X-Rays
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen Few scientific breakthroughs have had as immediate an impact as Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen's discovery of X-rays, a momentous event that instantly revolutionized the fields of physics and medicine. The X-ray emerged from the laboratory and into widespread use in a startlingly brief leap: within a year of Roentgen's announcement of his discovery, the application of X-rays to diagnosis and therapy was an established part of the medical profession. Roentgen's scientific career was one beset with difficulties. As a student in Holland, he was expelled from the Utrecht Technical School for a prank committed by another student. His lack of a diploma initially prevented him from obtaining a position at the University of Würzburg even after he received his doctorate, although he eventually was accepted. His experiments at Würzburg focused on light phenomena and other emissions generated by discharging electrical current in so-called "Crookes tubes," glass bulbs with positive and negative electrodes, evacuated of air, which display a fluorescent glow when a high voltage current is passed through it. He was particularly interested in cathode rays and in assessing their range outside of charged tubes.

37. Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
The German physicist wilhelm conrad roentgen, b. Mar. 27, 1845, d. Feb. 10, 1923,discovered X rays, for which he received (1901) the first nobel Prize for
http://www.phy.hr/~dpaar/fizicari/xroentge.html
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
The German physicist Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, b. Mar. 27, 1845, d. Feb. 10, 1923, discovered X rays, for which he received (1901) the first Nobel Prize for physics. He observed (1895) that barium platinocyanide crystals across the room fluoresced whenever he turned on a Crooke's, or cathode-ray discharge, tube, even when the tube, an electron emitter, was shielded by black cardboard or thin metal sheets. Roentgen correctly hypothesized that a previously unknown form of radiation of very short wavelength was involved, and that these X rays (a term he coined) caused the crystals to glow. He later demonstrated the metallurgical and medical use of X rays.

38. Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen
Translate this page Deutschen Röntgen-Museum (http//www.roentgen-museum.de Druck von H. Sturitz, 1894Wilhelm conrad Röntgen - Biography. nobel e-museum (http//www.nobel.se
http://www.historiadelamedicina.org/Roentgen.html

39. Pictures Gallery Of The Nobel Prize Winners In Physics
Translate this page The nobel Prize in Physics. 1998. Robert B. Laughlin Horst L. Störmer Daniel C.Tsui 1997. 1902. Hendrik Antoon Lorentz Pieter Zeeman 1901. wilhelm conrad roentgen
http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physpicnobel.html

40. 1Up Info > Roentgen, Wilhelm Conrad (Physics, Biographies) - Encyclopedia
roentgen or Röntgen, wilhelm conradboth r nt´g n, r nt 1895) of a shortwave ray,the roentgen ray, or X ray, for which he received the first nobel Prize in
http://www.1upinfo.com/encyclopedia/R/Roentgen.html
You are here 1Up Info Encyclopedia Physics, Biographies Roentgen, Wilhelm Conrad ... News Search 1Up Info
ENCYCLOPEDIA
Physics, Biographies Roentgen, Wilhelm Conrad Related Category: Physics, Biographies Roentgen or [both: r n, r n] Pronunciation Key
See biography by W. R. Nitske (1971). Related Resources and Utilities AMAZON All Products Books Magazines Popular Music Classical Music Video DVD Electronics Software Outdoor Living Wireless Phones Computers Outlet
Read articles on eLibrary:
In the Spotlight
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) Information

Encyclopedia Topics
History

People

Places

Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities. Home Contact Us Privacy Links Directory ©1Up Info

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 90    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter