Menu English Ukrainian russian Home

Free technical library for hobbyists and professionals Free technical library


CROSSWORD HANDBOOK
Free library / Crosswordist's Handbook / Scientists from different countries

Reference book crossword. Quick word search by mask. Scientists from different countries

Crosswordist's Handbook / Index

Crosswordist's Handbook

Comments on the article Comments on the article

Science, education, medicine / Scientists, inventors, designers / Scientists from different countries

(3)

BOR - Danish physicist

WOOD - American physicist

GRU - English botanist

Jung - Swiss psychologist and psychiatrist

(4)

ABBE - German optical physicist

BORN - German physicist

BREM - German zoologist

HERZ - German physicist

DEVI - English chemist

Kant - German philosopher

KARO - German chemist

LONG - American surgeon

SMITH - American microbiologist

SMITH - Scottish economic philosopher

TORO - American naturalist

YAKUT - Arabic scientist-encyclopedist

(5)

AARNE - Finnish folklorist

ABEL - Norwegian mathematician

ADAMS - English astronomer

ASARS - Spanish topographer, naturalist

BOYLE - English physicist and chemist

BRAGE - Danish astronomer

BROWN - English botanist

BRUNO - Italian thinker

BACON - English philosopher

WIENER - founder of cybernetics

GABOR - Hungarian physicist, creator of holography

GALL - Austrian physician, creator of phrenology

GAUSS - German mathematician

GIBBS - American physicist

GREWE - German ophthalmologist

Dirac - English physicist

DEWAR - English physicist

MARX - German philosopher

NEPER - English mathematician of the XNUMXth century, creator of logarithms

NIETZSCHE - German philosopher

PLANK - German physicist

Rayleigh - English physicist

Sorby - English naturalist

TOWNS - American physicist

Thorier - American philosopher

FERMI - Italian physicist

Freud - creator of psychoanalysis

Hubble - American astrophysicist

Euler - mathematician, physicist, astronomer

ERLICH - German doctor

(6)

AGOSTI - Argentine Marxist philosopher

ACOSTA - Dutch philosopher

AUVERS - German astronomer

BERNAL - English physicist

VOLTA - Italian physicist

Halley - English astronomer

Harvey - English doctor

Hegel - German philosopher

DARWIN - English biologist

JOUL - English physicist

Kantor - German mathematician

CARTER - English archaeologist

KEPLER - German astronomer

Kramer - Swiss mathematician

KRAUSE - German philosopher

LINNEUS - Swedish biologist

Lorenz - Austrian zoologist

Lorentz - Dutch physicist

Möbius - German mathematician

MORGAN - American biologist

NEWTON - English physicist

PAULING - American physicist, chemist

SERVAY - Spanish doctor

SCRAUP - Austrian chemist

TAYLOR - English mathematician

Thomson (Kelvin) - English physicist

Hindu - ancient Indian philosopher

CHLADNI - German physicist

OERSTED - Danish physicist

Esmarch - German doctor

(7)

GALILEO - Italian astronomer, physicist

Haeckel - German biologist

GREGORY - English mathematician

GRZIMEK - German zoologist

HUYGENS - Dutch physicist

DALTON - English physicist

DARRELL - English zoologist

Jenner - English doctor

DUDENY - English mathematician

KELVIN - English physicist, mechanic, engineer

COMPTON - American physicist

LEIBNITZ - German philosopher, mathematician, physicist

Macaulay - English historian and thinker

MANETHON - ancient Egyptian historian

MENDEL - Austrian biologist

RENTGEN - German physicist

ROSETTI - Romanian linguist

Spinoza - Dutch philosopher

TURING - English mathematician

UGLUGBEK - Central Asian astronomer

FARADEI - English physicist

Feynman - American physicist

Fleming - English microbiologist who discovered penicillin

CELSIUS - Swedish physicist

(8)

AVOGADRO - Italian physicist, chemist

ANGSTREM - Swedish physicist

Bernoulli - Swiss mathematician

Galvani - Italian physiologist

CAROGERS - American chemist

CONFUCIUS - ancient Chinese philosopher

COPERNICK - Polish astronomer

MAXWELL - English physicist

Millikan - American physicist

Feuerbach - German philosopher

Heyerdahl - Norwegian ethnographer

EINSTEIN - American physicist

(9)

HAMILTON - Irish mathematician

GRIMALDI - Italian physicist, astronomer

HUMBOLDT - German naturalist

Rutherford - English physicist

SCHROEDINGER - Austrian physicist

(10)

HEISENBERG - German physicist

HELMHOLTZ - German physicist

Campanella - Italian thinker

TORRICHELLI - Italian physicist

Schopenhauer - German philosopher

Word search to solve the crossword puzzle:

Replace each unknown letter with *. For example, dog * ka, * oshka, we ** a. Pairs е - ё, and - й are equated.



See other articles Section Crosswordist's Handbook.

Read and write useful comments on this article.

<< Back

Latest news of science and technology, new electronics:

Machine for thinning flowers in gardens 02.05.2024

In modern agriculture, technological progress is developing aimed at increasing the efficiency of plant care processes. The innovative Florix flower thinning machine was presented in Italy, designed to optimize the harvesting stage. This tool is equipped with mobile arms, allowing it to be easily adapted to the needs of the garden. The operator can adjust the speed of the thin wires by controlling them from the tractor cab using a joystick. This approach significantly increases the efficiency of the flower thinning process, providing the possibility of individual adjustment to the specific conditions of the garden, as well as the variety and type of fruit grown in it. After testing the Florix machine for two years on various types of fruit, the results were very encouraging. Farmers such as Filiberto Montanari, who has used a Florix machine for several years, have reported a significant reduction in the time and labor required to thin flowers. ... >>

Advanced Infrared Microscope 02.05.2024

Microscopes play an important role in scientific research, allowing scientists to delve into structures and processes invisible to the eye. However, various microscopy methods have their limitations, and among them was the limitation of resolution when using the infrared range. But the latest achievements of Japanese researchers from the University of Tokyo open up new prospects for studying the microworld. Scientists from the University of Tokyo have unveiled a new microscope that will revolutionize the capabilities of infrared microscopy. This advanced instrument allows you to see the internal structures of living bacteria with amazing clarity on the nanometer scale. Typically, mid-infrared microscopes are limited by low resolution, but the latest development from Japanese researchers overcomes these limitations. According to scientists, the developed microscope allows creating images with a resolution of up to 120 nanometers, which is 30 times higher than the resolution of traditional microscopes. ... >>

Air trap for insects 01.05.2024

Agriculture is one of the key sectors of the economy, and pest control is an integral part of this process. A team of scientists from the Indian Council of Agricultural Research-Central Potato Research Institute (ICAR-CPRI), Shimla, has come up with an innovative solution to this problem - a wind-powered insect air trap. This device addresses the shortcomings of traditional pest control methods by providing real-time insect population data. The trap is powered entirely by wind energy, making it an environmentally friendly solution that requires no power. Its unique design allows monitoring of both harmful and beneficial insects, providing a complete overview of the population in any agricultural area. “By assessing target pests at the right time, we can take necessary measures to control both pests and diseases,” says Kapil ... >>

Random news from the Archive

Viscous liquid of electrons flowing in graphene 06.03.2023

For the first time, scientists have directly measured the "liquid flow" of electrons in graphene at nanometer resolution.

Physicists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have observed how a stream of electrons turns into an analogue of a viscous liquid when it encounters interference inside a conductor.

Graphene is a two-dimensional atom-thick carbon material arranged in a honeycomb pattern. It is a pure electrical conductor in which electrons practically do not feel resistance. For the experiment, the researchers added obstacles at controlled distances to the graphene and then applied an electric current through it.

"In the study, we show how charge flows around an impurity, and actually see how this impurity blocks current and causes resistance, which has not been done before to distinguish between gaseous and liquid electron flows," says Zak Krebs, a graduate student in the Wisconsin Physics Department. University of Wisconsin-Madison and study co-author

The study showed that at temperatures close to absolute zero, the electrons in graphene behave like a gas: they move in all directions and collide more often than interact with each other. In this situation, the resistance is higher and the electron flow is relatively inefficient, the authors note.

On the contrary, at higher temperatures (about 77 K or -196 °C), electrons begin to interact with each other, as a result, they begin to move like a viscous (Newtonian) fluid. This process resembles a river flowing around a rock. At the same time, the resistance in graphene is lower, and the electron flow is more efficient. The physicists found that regardless of the distance between the obstacles, the voltage drop was much lower at 77K than at 4K.

Other interesting news:

▪ Bacteria found that converts methane into electricity

▪ Three years under the gaze of TV cameras

▪ PIONEER car system with hard drive

▪ Excavations at Stonehenge

▪ The polymer restores its structure

News feed of science and technology, new electronics

 

Interesting materials of the Free Technical Library:

▪ site section Chargers, accumulators, batteries. Article selection

▪ article The child will not open the box. Tips for the home master

▪ article Who was the Alexander Column in St. Petersburg originally dedicated to? Detailed answer

▪ article Driller. Job description

▪ article Control system of micro hydroelectric power plants. Encyclopedia of radio electronics and electrical engineering

▪ article Charger-discharge device for a cordless electric drill. Encyclopedia of radio electronics and electrical engineering

Leave your comment on this article:

Name:


Email (optional):


A comment:





All languages ​​of this page

Home page | Library | Articles | Website map | Site Reviews

www.diagram.com.ua

www.diagram.com.ua
2000-2024