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  1. Jacques Charles (born November 12, 1746, Beaugency, France—died April 7, 1823, Paris) was a French mathematician, physicist, and inventor who, with Nicolas Robert, was the first to ascend in a hydrogen balloon (1783). About 1787 he developed Charles’s law concerning the thermal expansion of gases.

  2. Jacques Alexandre César Charles (12 November 1746 – 7 April 1823) was a French inventor, scientist, mathematician, and balloonist .

  3. Nov 12, 2021 · On November 12, 1746, French inventor, scientist, mathematician, and balloonist Jacques Alexandre César Charles was born. Charles and the Robert brothers launched the world ‘s first (unmanned) hydrogen-filled balloon in August 1783.

  4. Nov 16, 1998 · The law's name honors the pioneer balloonist Jacques Charles, who in 1787 did experiments on how the volume of gases depended on temperature.

  5. 1746 – 1823. Jacques-Alexandre-C é sar Charles was a mathematician and physicist remembered for his pioneering work with gases and hydrogen balloon flights. Charles was born on November 12, 1746, in Beaugency, Loiret, France; his first occupation was as a clerk at the Ministry of Finance in Paris.

  6. www.smithsonianmag.com › air-space-magazine › the-first-soloThe First Solo Flight | Smithsonian

    Mar 4, 2009 · Wondering who wrote the first description of flying over a landscape, I came across this charming passage by Jacques Charles, French scientist and inventor of the hydrogen balloon.

  7. Jacques-Alexandre-César Charles was a mathematician and physicist remembered for his pioneering work with gases and hydrogen balloon flights. Charles was born on November 12, 1746, in Beaugency, Loiret, France; his first occupation was as a clerk at the Ministry of Finance in Paris.

  8. J acques-Alexandre-César Charles, with Nicolas Robert, ascended in the world's first hydrogen balloon in 1783. He was also a physicist and mathematician and is perhaps better known in this capacity as the person who developed Charles's law, which relates gas temperatures and pressures.

  9. Learn about Jacques Charles's experiments with gas and temperature, and discover how heating a gas in a closed container under constant pressure increases its volume. Uncover Charles's Law, the concept that volume divided by temperature is constant, and see it applied to real-world problems. Created by Ryan Scott Patton.

  10. Jacques Alexandre César Charles was a French inventor, scientist, mathematician, and balloonist. Charles wrote almost nothing about mathematics, and most of what has been credited to him was due to mistaking him with another Jacques Charles, also a member of the Paris Academy of Sciences, entering on 12 May 1785.

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