William Grove, Welsh physicist and jurist
Copper half cell
Banks introduces the Voltaic Pile
John Children, British chemist
Voltaic pile made by Volta, 1799
Faraday's voltameter
Large voltaic pile, 19th century
Becquerel, Antoine Cesar (1788-1878)
Faraday and Brande, English scientists
Galvani experimenting on frogs
Jean Baptiste Biot, French physicist
William Coblentz, US physicist
William Whewell, British polymath
Carey Foster, British physicist
John Fleming, British engineer
Jermain Creighton, US electrochemist
Colin Fink, US electrochemist
Michael Faraday, British physicist
Hoffman voltameter for electrolysis
Electrolysis of water
Robert Boyle, Irish chemist
Edouard Branly, French physicist
Manganese and copper voltaic cell
Wilhelm Ostwald, German physical chemist
Thomas Graham, Scottish chemist
William Crookes, British physicist
George Gabriel Stokes, British physicist
Underwater Torpedo
Johannes Nicolaus Bronsted, Danish chemist
Thomas Thomson, Scottish chemist
Joseph Swan, British inventor
Daniell electrochemical cell
Christian Schoenbein, German chemist
Henry Cavendish, British physical chemist
Battery 500 project, IBM research
Henry Crew, US physicist
Fritz Reiche, German physicist
Raymond Thayer Birge, US physicist
Geobacter metallireducens bacteria, TEM
Buckyball molecule, conceptual artwork
Lemon clock
Potato clock
Fuel cell
Sir David Brewster, Scottish physicist
Andre-Marie Ampere, French physicist
Gustav Kirchhoff, Robert Bunsen, and Henry Roscoe.
Henri Victor Regnault
Michael Faraday, English physicist
Ernest Dorsey, US physicist
Foucault's pendulum, Paris, 1851
Manufacture of artificial retinas
Electrochemical sensor production
William Whewell, English polymath
James Clerk Maxwell, Scottish physicist
Ernst Beckmann, German chemist
1835 Reverend William Whewell Portrait
Peter Debye, Dutch physical chemist
Emma Perry Carr, American spectroscopist
Kathleen Lonsdale, British chemist
Charles Daubeny, English botanist
Francis Thomas Bacon, British engineer
Christiaan Huygens, Dutch physicist
Lee De Forest, US inventor
William Brande, English chemist
Transmission electron microscopy, 1950s
Transmission electron microscopy, 1960s
Francis Frary, US electrochemist
Geobacter metallireducens bacterium, TEM
Electroless nickel plating tank
Shotgun pellets ready for electroless nickel plating
David Brewster, Scottish physicist
William Wollaston, English chemist
Marion Eppley, US physical chemist
William Henry, English chemist
Louis Melsens, Belgian physicist
Evangelista Torricelli, Italian physicist
Denis Papin, French physicist
Abel Niepce, French physicist
Faraday's egg
William Hyde Wollaston, British chemist
Lord Kelvin, British physicist
Oliver Heaviside, British physicist
Heinrich Magnus, German scientist
Richard C Tolman, US physicist
John Frederic Daniell, English chemist
Samuel Milner, British physicist
Arthur Webster, US physicist
William Henry Fox Talbot, photographer
Robert Boyle, Anglo-Irish chemist
William Eccles, British physicist
Harold Urey, US chemist
General Electric research, 1900s
William Lawrence Bragg, British physicist
Ugo Fano, Italian theoretical physicist
Artificial retinas
Davisson and Germer, US physicists
Dalton's list of atomic and molecular symbols
Dalton's symbols of compound elements
Edmond Becquerel
Robert Bunsen, Gustav Kirchoff and Henry Roscoe
Scientists from University of Breslau, 1852
Superconductor simulation
Quantum waves in topological insulators
Fraunhofer lines, diagram
Hermann Helmholtz, German physicist
Peter Debye, Dutch chemical physicist
William Crookes
Joseph Henry, American physicist
Gabriel Lippmann, French physicist
Maurice de Broglie, French physicist
Gaston Plante, French physicist
Theodore William Richards, US chemist
Enrico Fermi Awards ceremony, 2014
Franz Achard, German chemist
Three states of matter
Albert Wallace Hull, American physicist
Joseph Black, Scottish chemist
1889 Portrait Famous Fellow Royal Society
Charles Lyell, Scottish geologist
Max Planck, German physicist
Simeon Poisson, French physicist
Margaret Burbidge, British-US astronomer
Gabriele Rabel, Austrian physicist
Assorted batteries
Michael Pupin, Serbian physicist
Thomas Young, English physicist
Frederick Seitz, US physicist, Detlev Wulf Bronk, Paul Weiss
Henry Cavendish
William Edward Ayrton, British physicist
Hendrik Willem Bakhuis Roozeboom.
Thomas Thomson
Charles Hatchett, British chemist
Anselme Payen, French chemist
Max von Pettenkofer, German chemist
Raman scattering analysis
Electroless nickel plating factory
Quality control at electroless nickel plating factory
Aurel Stodola, Slovak engineer and physicist
Foucault pendulum
Henry Augustus Rowland.
Siren
Tesla demonstrating artificial daylight, 1890s
Joseph Henry, American scientist
Magnet used by Faraday
Galileo Galilei, Italian astronomer
Blaise Pascal, French mathematician
Otto von Guericke, German engineer
Magdeburg vacuum experiment, 1650s
Musschenbroek invents the Leyden jar
PETRUS VAN MUSSCHENBROEK (1692 - 1761)
Christoph Buys-Ballot, Dutch physicist
Edward Charles Pickering.
Abbe Nollet at the College of Navarre
John Tyndall, Irish physicist