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  2. Michael Faraday - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Faraday

    From his initial discovery in 1821, Faraday continued his laboratory work, exploring electromagnetic properties of materials and developing requisite experience. In 1824, Faraday briefly set up a circuit to study whether a magnetic field could regulate the flow of a current in an adjacent wire, but he found no such relationship. [52]

  3. Oersted's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oersted's_law

    The magnetic field (marked B, indicated by red field lines) around wire carrying an electric current (marked I) Compass and wire apparatus showing Ørsted's experiment (video [1]) In electromagnetism, Ørsted's law, also spelled Oersted's law, is the physical law stating that an electric current induces a magnetic field. [2]

  4. History of electromagnetic theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_electromagnetic...

    He left a detailed account of his research under the title of Experiments on the Origin of Electricity. [30] He discovered electrified bodies attracted light substances in a vacuum, indicating the electrical effect did not depend upon the air as a medium. He also added resin, and other substances, to the then known list of electrics. [11] [31 ...

  5. Joseph Henry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Henry

    Joseph Henry (December 17, 1797 [1] [2] – May 13, 1878) was an American physicist and inventor who served as the first secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.He was the secretary for the National Institute for the Promotion of Science, a precursor of the Smithsonian Institution. [3]

  6. He experimented with such physical models in an attempt to explain problems in navigation due varying properties of the magnetic compass with respect to their location on the earth, such as magnetic declination and magnetic inclination. His experiments explained the dipping of the needle by the magnetic attraction of the earth, and were used to ...

  7. William Gilbert (physicist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gilbert_(physicist)

    From these experiments, he concluded that Earth was itself magnetic, and that this was the reason why compasses point north (previously, some people believed that it was the pole-star Polaris, or a large magnetic island on the north pole that attracted the compass). He was the first person to argue that the center of Earth was iron, and he ...

  8. This experiment was a stunning display of the invisible quantum world, and this phenomenon became known, quite rightly, as the Casimir effect. It’d be another 50 years before the Yale physicist ...

  9. Petrus Peregrinus de Maricourt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrus_Peregrinus_de_Maricourt

    Pivoting compass needle in a 14th-century handcopy of Peter's Epistola de magnete (1269). Petrus Peregrinus de Maricourt (Latin), Pierre Pelerin de Maricourt (French), or Peter Peregrinus of Maricourt [1] (fl. 1269), was a French mathematician, physicist, and writer who conducted experiments on magnetism and wrote the first extant treatise describing the properties of magnets.