Becquerel, Antoine Cesar (1788-1878)
John Children, British chemist
William Grove, Welsh physicist and jurist
Faraday on induction rings, 1831
James Clerk Maxwell, Scottish physicist
Hans Christian Oersted
Galvani experimenting on frogs
Faraday's voltameter
Doorbell and internal mechanism
Michael Faraday, British physicist
Wilhelm Ostwald, German physical chemist
Apparatus invented
Karl Gauss
Joseph Henry, American scientist
William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin
Thomas Graham, Scottish chemist
Hoffman voltameter for electrolysis
Johannes Nicolaus Bronsted, Danish chemist
Ernest Dorsey, US physicist
Joseph Henry, American physicist
Peter Debye, Dutch physical chemist
Wilhelm Weber, German physicist
Lord Kelvin, British physicist
Electrolysis of water
Andre-Marie Ampere, French physicist
Twain and Jefferson in Tesla's laboratory, 1894
Joseph Jefferson in Tesla's laboratory, 1894
Colin Fink, US electrochemist
Large voltaic pile, 19th century
Voltaic pile made by Volta, 1799
Chemistry experiment, 19th century
Maurice de Broglie, French physicist
William Coblentz, US physicist
Banks introduces the Voltaic Pile
Buckyball molecule, conceptual artwork
Emma Perry Carr, American spectroscopist
Electromagnetic treatment for shoulder injury
William Whewell, English polymath
William Whewell, British polymath
Electrochemical sensor production
Jermain Creighton, US electrochemist
Battery 500 project, IBM research
Lemon clock
Potato clock
Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, French chemist
Edmond Becquerel
Lord Rayleigh discovering argon, 1894
Copper half cell
Fuel cell
Joseph Swan, British inventor
Louis Weisberg, US chemist
Raymond Thayer Birge, US physicist
Francis Bitter, US physicist
Daniell electrochemical cell
Walter Sydney Adams, American astronomer
Atomic processing microscopy
Tesla and Johnson in Tesla's laboratory, 1894
SIMS surface spectroscopy analysis
Jacques de Romas kite experiment
Fritz Reiche, German physicist
Ernst Beckmann, German chemist
Galvani's electricity experiments, 1780s
Carey Foster, British physicist
Magnetic soap research
Manufacture of artificial retinas
Superconductor simulation
Quantum waves in topological insulators
Kathleen Lonsdale, British chemist
Geobacter metallireducens bacteria, TEM
Abbe Nollet at the College of Navarre
Magnetic field strength meter
Magnetic field analyser
Daniel Colladon, Swiss physicist
Henry Crew, US physicist
William Henry, English chemist
Robert Boyle, Anglo-Irish chemist
Scanning transmission electron microscopy
Scanning electron microscopy
Jean-Antoine Chaptal, French chemist
James Keeler, US astronomer
Magnetic field from an electric current
Robert Boyle, Irish chemist
Joseph Black, Scottish chemist
Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
Henry Cavendish, British physical chemist
Franz Achard, German chemist
Fibre analysis equipment
Ionising X-ray spectroscope
George Gabriel Stokes, British physicist
James Joule, British physicist
Francis Thomas Bacon, British engineer
Testing iron for magnetic properties
Louis Pasteur
Joseph Priestley, British chemist
John Dalton, British chemist
William Ramsay, Scottish chemist
Alchemist, historical artwork
Stanislao Cannizzaro, Italian chemist
James Nasmyth, Scottish engineer
1860's Charles Lyell portrait photo cdv
Francois Arag
Faraday's egg
Dalton's list of atomic and molecular symbols
Dalton's symbols of compound elements
Tesla demonstrating his transformer
Fraunhofer lines, diagram
Teaching electromagnetism, circa 1899
Benjamin Thompson Rumford.
Artificial retinas
Ground penetrating radar machine
Thomas Andrews, Irish physical chemist
Thomas Thomson
Hendrik Willem Bakhuis Roozeboom.
Thomas Thomson, Scottish chemist
Charles Hatchett, British chemist
Christian Schoenbein, German chemist
Anselme Payen, French chemist
Max von Pettenkofer, German chemist
Edward Dorris McAlister, US biophysicist
William Mordey, British engineer
Chien-Shiung Wu and Wallace Brode, 1958
Transmission electron microscopy, 1950s
Gustav Kirchhoff, Robert Bunsen, and Henry Roscoe.
Jean Baptiste Biot, French physicist
Lithium flame test
Henri Victor Regnault
Weighing a crucible
Robert Bunsen, Gustav Kirchoff and Henry Roscoe
Electro-optical laser characterization
TOF SIMS spectrometer
Scanning probe microscopy sample holder
Three states of matter
Geobacter metallireducens bacterium, TEM
Raman scattering analysis
Electroless nickel plating tank
Shotgun pellets ready for electroless nickel plating
Sir John Douglas Cockcroft.
David Hughes, US inventor
Oliver Heaviside, British physicist
Hertha Marks Ayrton, British engineer
Tesla meets King Peter II of Yugoslavia, 1942
1889 Portrait Famous Fellow Royal Society
John Frederic Daniell
Balloon-borne lightning conductors.
Antoine Lavoisier, French chemist
George Scatchard, American chemist
Volatile organic compounds detector
Faraday's electric motor
Iron filings on a magnet
Frederick Abel, British chemist
Fine Guidance Sensor
Optical resonator
Dark matter detector
Glass and ceramics research
Rev John Barlow, British administrator
Reverend John Barlow, administrator
Ferrofluid in a magnetic field
Charles Baskerville, US chemist
Victor Bloede, German-US chemist
Charles Chandler, US chemist.
Lafayette Mendel, US biochemist
Dielectric test of Teflon plastic, 1940s
Galileo Galilei, Italian astronomer
Title page of Isaac Newton's 'Principia'
Chien-Shiung Wu, Chinese-US physicist
James Van Allen, US astrophysicist
Jacques de Romas