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  1. According to our current on-line database, Johann Schweigger has 3 students and 10913 descendants. We welcome any additional information. If you have additional information or corrections regarding this mathematician, please use the update form.To submit students of this mathematician, please use the new data form, noting this mathematician's MGP ID of 101893 for the advisor ID.

  2. Johann Salomo Christoph Schweigger (Erlangen, 1779. április 8. – Halle, 1857. szeptember 6.) német fizikus. Élete. Szülővárosában, Erlangenben végezte tanulmányait, 1800-ban pedig az ottani egyetemen magántanár lett. 1803-ban a bayreuthi gimnáziumra hívták meg, ahol fizikát és matematikát adott elő; 1811-ben ...

  3. According to our current on-line database, Johann Schweigger has 3 students and 10925 descendants. We welcome any additional information. If you have additional information or corrections regarding this mathematician, please use the update form.To submit students of this mathematician, please use the new data form, noting this mathematician's MGP ID of 101893 for the advisor ID.

  4. Biografía de Schweigger, Johann Salomo Christoph (1.779 - 1.857). Físico alemán. Profesor en Bayreuth, Nuremberg, Erlangen y Halle, estudió el electromagnetismo y fue el primero en utilizar la desviación de una aguja magnética en la medición de una fuerza electromotriz.

  5. Johann Salomo Christoph Schweigger (n.8 aprilie 1779, Erlangen – d. 6 septembrie 1857, Halle) a fost un chimist și fizician german.A fost și profesor de matematică, fizică și chimie la Bayreuth, Nürnberg și la Universitatea din Halle.. A propus numele de clor pentru substanța descoperită în 1774 de Carl Wilhelm Scheele și identificată ulterior ca element chimic de Humphry Davy.

  6. SCHWEIGGER, JOHANN SALOMO CHRISTOPH. ( b. Erlangen, Bavaria, 8 April 1779; d. Halle, Prussia, 6 September 1857) Physics, Chemistry. Schweigger was the son of Friedrich Schweigger, extraordinary professor of theology at the Protestant University of Erlangen and archdeacon of a parish in that city. In addition to attending the Gymnasium in ...

  7. Johann Schweigger was a professor of chemistry at the University of Halle in Germany at the time Ørsted gave his fateful lecture at the University of Copenhagen that led to his momentous discovery. Schweigger also served as coeditor of the Journal for Chemistry and Physics , which likely gave him the chance to take an early peak at the treatise Ørsted submitted describing his findings.