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  2. William Joseph Hammer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Joseph_Hammer

    He was born in Cressona, Pennsylvania on February 26, 1858 to William Hammer (1827–1895) and Martha Augusta Beck (1827–1861). [1] [2]He became a laboratory assistant to Thomas Edison in December 1879, and assisted in the development of the incandescent light bulb. [3]

  3. Electron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron

    A 1906 proposal to change to electrion failed because Hendrik Lorentz preferred to keep electron. [25] [26] The word electron is a combination of the words electric and ion. [27] The suffix -on which is now used to designate other subatomic particles, such as a proton or neutron, is in turn derived from electron. [28] [29]

  4. Timeline of electrical and electronic engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_electrical_and...

    Manfred von Ardenne invented and developed the flying-spot scanner, Europe's first fully electronic television camera tube. In Britain, the first television advertising and the first TV interview; 1931 The British engineer and inventor Alan Dower Blumlein (1903–1942) invents "Binaural Sound", today called "Stereo".

  5. Manfred von Ardenne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manfred_von_Ardenne

    In 1947, Ardenne was awarded a Stalin Prize for his development of a table-top electron microscope. In 1953, before his return to Germany, he was awarded a Stalin Prize, first class, for contributions to the atomic bomb project ; the money from this prize, 100,000 Rubles , was used to buy the land for his private institute in East Germany .

  6. Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania

    Pennsylvania's most populous city is Philadelphia. Pennsylvania was founded in 1681 through a royal land grant to William Penn, the son of the state's namesake. Before that, between 1638 and 1655, a southeast portion of the state was part of New Sweden, a Swedish colony.

  7. Edwin McMillan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_McMillan

    Edwin Mattison McMillan (September 18, 1907 – September 7, 1991) was an American physicist credited with being the first to produce a transuranium element, neptunium.For this, he shared the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Glenn Seaborg.

  8. J. J. Thomson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._J._Thomson

    This became the classic means of measuring the charge-to-mass ratio of the electron. Later in 1899 he measured the charge of the electron to be of 6.8 × 10 −10 esu. [33] Thomson believed that the corpuscles emerged from the atoms of the trace gas inside his cathode-ray tubes. He thus concluded that atoms were divisible, and that the ...

  9. Robert Andrews Millikan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Andrews_Millikan

    Millikan in 1891. Robert Andrews Millikan was born on March 22, 1868, in Morrison, Illinois. [6] He went to high school in Maquoketa, Iowa and received a bachelor's degree in the classics from Oberlin College in 1891 and his doctorate in physics from Columbia University in 1895 [11] – he was the first to earn a Ph.D. from that department.