Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emil_LenzEmil Lenz - Wikipedia

    Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz (/ l ɛ n t s /; German:; also Emil Khristianovich Lenz, Russian: Эмилий Христианович Ленц; 12 February 1804 – 10 February 1865), usually cited as Emil Lenz or Heinrich Lenz in some countries, was a Russian physicist of Baltic German descent who is most noted for formulating Lenz's law in ...

  2. Baltic German physicist Heinrich Lenz took the first step toward filling this gap with his formulation of Lenz’s law, his most enduring contribution to physics. Lenz’s Law states that the introduction of a conductor within an electromagnetic field will produce electricity, inducing an opposing magnetic field that repels the magnetic field ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz. 1804-1865. Russian physicist who discovered the relationship between electrical resistance and temperature (also called Joule's Law) and first stated the law describing electrical inductance.

  5. May 17, 2024 · Lenz’s law, in electromagnetism, statement that an induced electric current flows in a direction such that the current opposes the change that induced it. This law was deduced in 1834 by the Russian physicist Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz (1804–65).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. May 8, 2024 · Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz. (1804—1865) Quick Reference. (1804–1865) Russian physicist. While a student at the university in his native city of Dorpat (now Tartu in Estonia), Lenz accompanied a voyage around the world as a geophysicist.

  7. Jul 28, 2023 · Emil Lenz was a Russian physicist of Baltic German descent who is most noted for formulating Lenz's Law in electrodynamics in 1834. [1] Emil Lenz was born Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz in 1804. His parents were Christian Heinrich Friedrich Lenz and Louise Wolf. [2]

  8. Heinrich Friedrich Emil Lenz ( russisch Эмилий Христианович Ленц; * 12. März jul. / 24. März 1804 greg. [1] in Dorpat (heute Tartu, Estland ); † 10. Februar 1865 in Rom) war ein russischer Physiker deutsch-baltischer Herkunft, [2] welcher als einer der Ersten die Zusammenhänge zwischen Magnetfeldern und elektrischen Feldern erkannte.

  1. People also search for