Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Eugenio Barsanti. Father Eugenio Barsanti (12 October 1821 – 19 April 1864), also named Nicolò, was an Italian engineer, who together with Felice Matteucci of Lucca invented the first version of the internal combustion engine in 1853, Florence.

  2. In late 1851 or early 1852 Eugenio Barsanti, a professor of mathematics, and Felice Matteucci, an engineer and expert in mechanics and hydraulics, joined forces on a project to exploit the explosion and expansion of a gaseous mix of hydrogen and atmospheric air to transform part of the energy of such explosions into mechanical energy.

  3. Nicolò Barsanti, meglio conosciuto come Eugenio ( Pietrasanta, 12 ottobre 1821 – Seraing, 18 aprile 1864 ), è stato un presbitero, ingegnere e inventore italiano, l'ideatore e costruttore del primo motore a combustione interna funzionante. Francobollo che ritrae Eugenio Barsanti e Felice Matteucci.

  4. Eugenio Barsanti. Nicolò Barsanti was born in Pietrasanta (LU) on October 12 – 1821, son of Giovanni Barsanti, a marble sculptor and Angela Francesconi. He was a delicate child with good natured and affectionate nature.

  5. Oct 13, 2023 · The engineer Eugenio Barsanti, whose internal combustion engine was the first working example of the technology known to have been produced, was born on this day in 1821 in Pietrasanta, a town in northern Tuscany. The Belgian-French engineer Étienne Lenoir and the German Nicolaus Otto are credited with the first commercially successful ...

  6. People also ask

  7. The Barsanti and Matteucci Foundation. has the primary aim of disseminating the story of the two scientists from Lucca, Eugenio Barsanti and Felice Matteucci, and their invention: the first working internal combustion engine in history.

  8. Eugenio Barsanti was a priest, but also a physicist and mathematician. He was born in 1821 in Pietrasanta, Versilia, in the province of Lucca, with the name of Nicolò. At the age of 17 he decided to enter the convent of Sant' Agostino in Pietrasanta, under the academic direction of the congregation of the Scolopi Fathers.

  1. People also search for