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      • Wilhelm Eduard Weber (born Oct. 24, 1804, Wittenberg, Ger.—died June 23, 1891, Göttingen) was a German physicist who, with his friend Carl Friedrich Gauss, investigated terrestrial magnetism and in 1833 devised an electromagnetic telegraph. The magnetic unit, termed a weber, formerly the coulomb, is named after him.
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  2. Apr 15, 2024 · Copley Medal (1859) Subjects Of Study: electromagnetism. Wilhelm Eduard Weber (born Oct. 24, 1804, Wittenberg, Ger.—died June 23, 1891, Göttingen) was a German physicist who, with his friend Carl Friedrich Gauss, investigated terrestrial magnetism and in 1833 devised an electromagnetic telegraph.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Mar 8, 2016 · Webers findings paved the way for Maxwell’s hypothesis that light waves are electromagnetic. Weber also developed a theory of electrodynamics, which is an alternative to Maxwell electrodynamics. The SI unit of magnetic flux, the weber with the symbol ‘Wb’ is named after Wilhelm Eduard Weber.

  4. Dec 4, 2015 · In 1833, they developed the first electromagnetic telegraph, which functioned as a battery-operated telegraph line that was 9,000 meters long stretching from the physics laboratory to the astronomical observatory. Later, it was modified to use induced currents rather than battery power. Magnetic Maps and Electrodynamics.

  5. Wilhelm Eduard Weber. 1804-1891. German physicist who invented the electrodynamometer and other devices for measuring electrical and magnetic effects. Weber directed the Göttingen astronomical observatory and was a professor of physics at Leipzig and Göttingen University.

  6. One of the discoveries first made known here was that the particles on the surface of a liquid when there is an advancing wave, all revolve in vertical circles in the plane of the direction of propagation of the wave, while the particles lower down move in ellipses whose vertical axis becomes smaller and smaller as the particles are deeper.

  7. Jun 27, 2018 · WEBER, WILHELM EDUARD. ( b. Wittenberg, Germany, 24 October 1804; d. Göttingen, Germany, 23 June 1891), physics. Weber was one of twelve children of Michael Weber, professor of theology at the University of Wittenberg. Of four brothers and a sister who lived to an advanced age, the eldest brother became a minister, while the other brothers ...

  8. He was professor (1831–37, 1849–91) at the Univ. of Göttingen, where he worked with C. F. Gauss on terrestrial magnetism and devised an electromagnetic telegraph. He introduced the absolute system of electrical units. The coulomb was once known as the weber; now the weber is a magnetic unit.

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