Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Hace 3 días · The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) and its thermoelectric counterpart, the anomalous Nernst effect (ANE), are two transverse transport coefficients that are intensely studied in condensed matter physics.

  2. Hace 2 días · That man was Walther Nernst, a German chemist whose heat theorem helped pave the way for the third law of thermodynamics. He envisaged the conference as a means of publicising his theorem. Trying to reconcile the theories of Einstein and Max Planck, Nernst saw how their ideas fed one other.

  3. Hace 4 días · In 1897, German physicist and chemist Walther Nernst developed the Nernst lamp, a form of incandescent lamp that used a ceramic globar and did not require enclosure in a vacuum or inert gas. Twice as efficient as carbon filament lamps, Nernst lamps were briefly popular until overtaken by lamps using metal filaments.

  4. Hace 5 días · Diana Kormos Barkan: Walther Nernst and the transition to modern physical science, Cambridge 1999. In: Physikalische Blätter 56, p. 1999. Reinhard Siegmund-Schultze: Mathematiker auf der Flucht vor Hitler. Quellen und Studien zur Emigration einer Wissenschaft, Braunschweig 1998. In: H-Soz-u-Kult, 10.02.1999. 1998. Peter Galison: Image and logic.

  5. Hace 5 días · The Nernst equation, formulated by Walther Nernst, provides a mathematical relationship between the electrode potential, the concentration of species in the electrochemical cell, and other relevant factors.

  6. Hace 3 días · On May 31st in science history, one significant event occurred in 1911 when German physicist Walther Nernst introduced the third law of thermodynamics at the first Solvay Conference in Brussels, Belgium. The third law of thermodynamics, also known as Nernst's heat theorem, states that the entropy of a perfect crystal at absolute zero is exactly equal to zero.

  7. Hace 4 días · Walther Nernst Schack August S. Krogh: 1919 Johannes Stark: No 1919 Nobel Prize science winners for Chemistry awarded. Jules Bordet: 1918 Max Planck Fritz Haber: No 1918 Nobel Prize science winners for Medicine or Physiology. 1917 Charles Glover Barkla: No 1917 Nobel Prize science winners for Chemistry awarded.