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单词 Galvani
例句 Galvani
But open the shutters and light pours in through the trees on Via Galvani. A peperonata recipe straight from Rome | Kitchen sink tales 2015-10-29T04:00:00Z
Galvani is not a competitor of Neuralink because its implants under development will be installed in an artery to the spleen to help treat rheumatoid arthritis, rather than the brain. Exclusive: Musk's Neuralink valued at about $5 bln despite long road to market 2023-06-05T04:00:00Z
The term's namesake, Luigi Galvani, believed that galvanism confirmed his theory of a form of energy called "animal electricity" that gives living things their life force. Zombies abound in nature: Viruses and parasites can cause real-world zombification 2022-10-30T04:00:00Z
“Health care reform is long overdue in the U.S.,” says the study’s lead author Alison Galvani, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Modeling and Analysis at the Yale School of Public Health. Universal Health Care Could Have Saved More Than 330,000 U.S. Lives during COVID 2022-06-13T04:00:00Z
Galvani's investigations revealed that nerve fibers transmitted “animal electricity,” which is no different in kind from the “atmospheric electricity” that Benjamin Franklin discovered with his kite experiments in Philadelphia in 1752. Electrodes That Stimulate the Brain Reveal the Roots of Conscious Experience 2021-06-16T04:00:00Z
The Italian physicist Alessandro Volta rejected the idea of ‘animal electricity’, proposed by his rival Luigi Galvani as a vital force that animates organic matter. Neuroscience needs some new ideas 2020-03-29T04:00:00Z
Journalist Michele Galvani accused the city authorities of "playing with citizens' lives". Why do Rome's buses keep catching fire? 2018-05-08T04:00:00Z
Among the influences she cites in a preface to an 1831 edition of her novel is Luigi Galvani, who in 1780 found that an electrical charge could make a dead frog's legs twitch. The specter of Frankenstein still haunts science 200 years later 2018-01-10T05:00:00Z
“Many Americans feel secure in having good health insurance from their employer, but employer-based insurance can be cut off when it is needed most,” Galvani points out. Universal Health Care Could Have Saved More Than 330,000 U.S. Lives during COVID 2022-06-13T04:00:00Z
Bruno Galvani of Anmil, Italy’s largest association for people with disabilities, said Italy is “very progressive from a legislative standpoint, but it’s difficult to ensure that these laws are applied.” For Italians With Disabilities, a Place in the Sun 2017-09-03T04:00:00Z
When the two metals connected - Galvani's scalpel touching the brass hook on which the legs were hung - the circuit was complete, and a chemical reaction caused electrons to flow. Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars - BBC News 2017-04-30T04:00:00Z
“Dove is very much about championing all different types of beauty,” Galvani continued. Dove starts body positivity campaign featuring women from diverse backgrounds 2017-03-03T05:00:00Z
Galvani Bioelectronics hopes to bring a new treatment based on the technique before regulators within seven years. 'Hacking nerves can control disease' - BBC News 2016-08-01T04:00:00Z
In the new study, Galvani’s team compared the mortality risks of COVID-19 among people with and without insurance, as well as their risks of all other causes of death. Universal Health Care Could Have Saved More Than 330,000 U.S. Lives during COVID 2022-06-13T04:00:00Z
Mr. Galvani, a paraplegic since a work accident 36 years ago, added: “It’s not just about going to the beach. These are policies that touch on equality, human rights and integration.” For Italians With Disabilities, a Place in the Sun 2017-09-03T04:00:00Z
Galvani thought he had discovered "animal electricity", and his nephew was carrying on the investigations. Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars - BBC News 2017-04-30T04:00:00Z
Galvani Bioelectronics is named after Luigi Galvani, an 18th-century scientist who is best known for his work on bioelectricity and his experiments animating severed frogs' legs using jolts of electricity. GlaxoSmithKline and Google team up to create new bioelectronics health company 2016-08-01T04:00:00Z
Galvani will initially employ around 30 scientists, engineers and clinicians. GSK and Google parent forge $715 million bioelectronic medicines firm 2016-08-01T04:00:00Z
“Medicare for All would be both an economic stimulus and life-saving transformation of our health care system,” Galvani says. Universal Health Care Could Have Saved More Than 330,000 U.S. Lives during COVID 2022-06-13T04:00:00Z
In the late seventeen-hundreds, the Italian physician Luigi Galvani noticed that static electricity could induce a dead frog’s leg to move. Goodbye, fMRI 2015-05-11T04:00:00Z
But Galvani was wrong in a useful way, because he showed his experiments to his friend Alessandro Volta, who had better intuition about what was going on. Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars - BBC News 2017-04-30T04:00:00Z
Additionally, the patent approval process can take years, said Thomas W. Galvani, a patent lawyer in Phoenix. More Older Adults Are Becoming Inventors 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
Galvani, however, is taking electrical interventions to the micro level, using tiny implants to coax insulin from cells to treat diabetes, for example, or correct muscle imbalances in lung diseases. GSK and Google parent forge $715 million bioelectronic medicines firm 2016-08-01T04:00:00Z
Whatever the exact figures, Galvani says the message that comes out of the new study is clear: “Universal single-payer health care is both economically responsible and morally imperative.” Universal Health Care Could Have Saved More Than 330,000 U.S. Lives during COVID 2022-06-13T04:00:00Z
Around the same time, Luigi Galvani’s experiments with electricity and dead frogs led to the discovery of bioelectrical impulses. Zap Your Brain 2015-03-30T04:00:00Z
Foster's body was being galvanised - a word coined for Luigi Galvani, the Italian scientist's uncle. Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars - BBC News 2017-04-30T04:00:00Z
“Yet filing a patent on your own can be a fatal mistake,” said Mr. Galvani, “since there are a number of technical requirements.” More Older Adults Are Becoming Inventors 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
Galvani believed the frogs’ muscles generated the electricity, while Volta thought the animal tissue was only a conductor. New Google Doodle Honors Alessandro Volta 2015-02-17T05:00:00Z
That does not surprise Alison Galvani, an epidemiologist at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and an author of both studies. Models overestimate Ebola cases 2014-11-03T05:00:00Z
Galvani’s nephew Giovanni Aldini was the first to apply galvanic current to humans; in this way he seemingly reanimated the corpses of beheaded felons. Zap Your Brain 2015-03-30T04:00:00Z
In 1780s Italy, Galvani had discovered that touching the severed legs of a dead frog with two different types of metal caused the legs to jerk. Battery bonanza: From frogs' legs to mobiles and electric cars - BBC News 2017-04-30T04:00:00Z
A member of the study team, Alison Galvani, said in a statement Friday that there was a limited window to get the disease under control and avert a catastrophic death toll. Mali monitors 43 people as it tackles its first case of Ebola 2014-10-24T04:00:00Z
Born February 18, 1745 in Como, Italy, Volta’s invention was the result of a professional competition with Luigi Galvani, who discovered that dissected frogs’ legs would twitch when probed with a wire. New Google Doodle Honors Alessandro Volta 2015-02-17T05:00:00Z
Galvani imagines the Nimbus would offer four drive modes, including 4WD. This is the car you'd drive to explore national parks on Mars 2014-07-04T04:00:00Z
Alison Galvani, an epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health in New Haven, Connecticut, became one of the institution's youngest-ever tenured faculty members two years ago, at the age of 33. Turning point: Alison Galvani 2012-07-11T17:20:50.577Z
Their research solved a mystery dating to 1771, when the Italian physicist Luigi Galvani zapped the leg of a dead frog with electricity, making it twitch. Andrew Huxley, Nobel-Winning Physiologist, Dies at 94 2012-06-04T18:47:19Z
George helps us appreciate what Galileo did with inclined planes, Newton with prisms, Pavlov with dogs, Galvani with frogs, Millikan with oil drops, Faraday with a magnet and coil of wire. What Are Science's Ugliest Experiments? 2012-05-14T23:45:07.783Z
As in the case of Galvani's frog, the laughable occurrences that you refuse to believe reveal the existence of new unknown forces. Mysterious Psychic Forces An Account of the Author's Investigations in Psychical Research, Together with Those of Other European Savants 2012-03-28T02:00:29.747Z
Galvani started with them in the early days, and they’ve still got to ‘shake a leg’ in the interest of science.” Bert Wilson, Wireless Operator 2012-03-27T02:00:19.467Z
This May, Galvani received a Blavatnik Award for Young Scientists, bestowed by the New York Academy of Sciences and the Blavatnik Family Foundation to reward innovative, interdisciplinary work. Turning point: Alison Galvani 2012-07-11T17:20:50.577Z
So with Galvani, Jenner, Franklin, Watt, Davy, and all other philosophers; their discoveries were invariably the result of patient labor, of long study, and of earnest investigation. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol IV. No. XX. January, 1852. 2012-02-24T03:00:24.390Z
Then came Watt and Galvani with the miracles of steam and electricity, while countless inventors created the wonderful machines that do the work of the world. The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 2 (of 12) Dresden Edition?Lectures 2012-02-11T03:03:51.557Z
In 1798, Galvani, an Italian physician, accidentally discovered that the muscles of a dead frog were convulsed by the body coming in contact with two metals. Knowledge is Power: A View of the Productive Forces of Modern Society and the Results of Labor, Capital and Skill. 2011-12-24T03:08:00.833Z
It is named in honor of an Italian professor named Galvani who made important early experiments with electricity. Electricity for the 4-H Scientist Idaho Agricultural Extension Service Bulletin 396, June, 1962 2011-11-18T03:00:30.487Z
Galvani gave order to have edible frogs caught. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
Galvani and the Electric Current Franklin had proven that there is electricity in the atmosphere, and that lightning is an electric discharge. The Story of Great Inventions 2011-10-05T02:00:16.353Z
Galvani's experiments suggested the electric battery to Volta, another Italian scientist who was born in 1745. Great Inventions and Discoveries 2011-10-01T02:00:30.900Z
But Galvani was not destined to follow far the new path he had thus opened. Scientific Culture, and Other Essays Second Edition; with Additions 2011-09-17T02:00:31.747Z
On Galvani’s refusal, from religious scruples, to take the oath of allegiance to the Cisalpine republic in 1797, he was removed from his professorship. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 4 "G" to "Gaskell, Elizabeth" 2011-08-24T02:00:20.690Z
Before the cook came after the frogs, Galvani kept on showing the electric machine to his students, and sending sparks through it. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
Volta and the Electric Battery It was left for Alexander Volta to show that, in Galvani's experiment, the muscles of the frog, together with the brass hook and the iron railing, formed an electric battery. The Story of Great Inventions 2011-10-05T02:00:16.353Z
Volta and Galvani, whose names have become so familiar in modern electricity, were both of them well known for their devotion to the practice of daily religious duties. Religion And Health 2011-08-12T02:00:18.323Z
When, as in the case of Galvani's frogs, they come in the order of Providence, let us thank God for them as a gift which we had no right either to expect or demand. Scientific Culture, and Other Essays Second Edition; with Additions 2011-09-17T02:00:31.747Z
The discoveries of Galvani and Volta at once set leading scientists at work. Inventions in the Century 2011-07-20T02:00:14.643Z
Galvani collected more frogs, and began to experiment with them. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
Galvani did not know that he had discovered a new source of electricity. The Story of Great Inventions 2011-10-05T02:00:16.353Z
Professor Volta, also of Italy, proved that Galvani's idea was wrong, and that the electricity resided in the metals rather than in the frog. Autobiography of an Electron Wherein the Scientific Ideas of the Present Time Are Explained in an Interesting and Novel Fashion 2011-06-19T02:00:25.633Z
The phenomena were everywhere reproduced, but Galvani's explanation of the phenomena was by no means so universally accepted. Scientific Culture, and Other Essays Second Edition; with Additions 2011-09-17T02:00:31.747Z
By the discoveries of Galvani the physicians and physiologists were greatly excited, and believed that by this new vital power the nature of all kinds of nervous diseases could be explored and the remedy applied. Inventions in the Century 2011-07-20T02:00:14.643Z
It occurred to Galvani that live frogs moved their legs because electricity passed through them. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
With Galvani's discovery of the twitching of the muscles of the frog there came a new impetus to the exploitation of electricity in medicine. Psychotherapy 2011-06-19T02:00:20.053Z
About 1790, Professor Galvani, of Italy, observed that the legs of a freshly killed frog twitched at each discharge of an electrical machine. Autobiography of an Electron Wherein the Scientific Ideas of the Present Time Are Explained in an Interesting and Novel Fashion 2011-06-19T02:00:25.633Z
Galvani published his observations in 1791, in a monograph entitled "The Action of Electricity in Muscular Motion." Scientific Culture, and Other Essays Second Edition; with Additions 2011-09-17T02:00:31.747Z
His fellow countryman and contemporary, Prof. Volta of Pavia, took decided issue with Galvani and maintained that the pretended animal electricity was nothing but electricity developed by the contact of two different metals. Inventions in the Century 2011-07-20T02:00:14.643Z
Galvani was just taking them down, and as he did so a frog's leg touched the iron gutter, and it jerked. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
"So has Galvani observed," he said, "that a frog which stands in electrical relations quivers as often as thunder rolls over the earth." Titan: A Romance Vol. II (of 2) 2011-06-14T02:00:26.670Z
It was Galvani's wife who noticed what had happened and who had the assistant use the scalpel once more with the same result. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Volta, while admitting, with Galvani, that the muscular contractions were caused by electricity, explained the origin of the electricity in a wholly different way. Scientific Culture, and Other Essays Second Edition; with Additions 2011-09-17T02:00:31.747Z
Galvani and Volta, who gave their names—one to Galvanic, and the other to Voltaic electricity—were professors in Italy. Twentieth Century Socialism What It Is Not; What It Is: How It May Come 2011-01-17T03:00:51.213Z
Galvani took down the frogs and made the following experiment: he tied to the brass hook an iron wire, and touched the leg with the wire, and it jerked. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
It was Galvani's wife who first directed his attention to the convulsions of a frog's leg when placed near an electrical machine. Woman in Science With an Introductory Chapter on Woman's Long Struggle for Things of the Mind 2011-01-12T03:00:29.853Z
Almost more interesting than Galvani the scientist, however, is Galvani the man. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
I could tell of Galvani studying for twenty long years, to no apparent purpose, the twitching of frogs' hind-legs, and thus sowing the seed from which has sprung the greatest invention of modern times. Scientific Culture, and Other Essays Second Edition; with Additions 2011-09-17T02:00:31.747Z
In 1786, Galvani first observed the twitching of the legs of a dissected frog produced by discharges of a nearby electrostatic machine, thereby revealing still another “effect” of electricity. The Earliest Electromagnetic Instruments
So Galvani decided that the animals lived because there was electricity in them, and that the electricity jumped from the brain to the flesh, and that made the animals move. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
All the men after whom modes and units of electricity are named--Galvani, Volta, Coulomb, Ampere, Ohm--were not only members of the Church, but what would be even called devout Catholics. The Popes and Science The History of the Papal Relations to Science During the Middle Ages and Down to Our Own Time
Galvani has been honored by his fellow-citizens of Bologna as one of their greatest townsmen and by the university as one of her worthiest sons. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
How silly it was for Galvani to make a frog's leg twitch with his bits of zinc and copper! The Scrap Book, Volume 1, No. 6 August 1906
Volta himself realized that the crucial test between his theory and that of Galvani required confirming the existence of metal-contact electricity by some electrical but nonphysiological detector. The Earliest Electromagnetic Instruments
Nobody had at that time tried this matter and they did not know any better, and so they all believed Galvani. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
Probably one or more of the group, dwelling on the observations which Galvani, an Italian, had made known some twenty years before, developed views on the connection of electricity with the phenomena of living bodies. The Voice of Science in Nineteenth-Century Literature Representative Prose and Verse
Galvani's lack of prejudice in the matter shows the readiness of the man to accept the best wherever he found it without regard to persons or feelings. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
This discovery of Galvani was first brought to notice by Volta's famous paper to the Royal Society, entitled "An Account of some Discoveries made by Mr. Galvani, of Bologna," published in the Phil. A History of Science, Volume 5(of 5) Aspects Of Recent Science
After Professor Galvani had touched the muscles and nerves of many frogs with the spark drawn from the electrical machine, another accident occurred which led directly to the discovery of the galvanic battery. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
But at that time another learned man, Volta, experimented in his own way, and proved to everybody that Galvani was mistaken. Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales 2011-11-17T03:00:35.327Z
The experiments of Galvani and others, have however proved beyond all doubt, that this fluid, when applied to the nerves and muscles, is capable of exciting various sensations and motions. Popular Lectures on Zoonomia Or The Laws of Animal Life, in Health and Disease
This was typically true of Galvani, who had to construct his own first electrical instruments, and of Laennec, who took pride in making his own stethoscopes. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
The discoveries of Volta and Galvani were in like manner independent of theory; the greatest discoveries consisting in bringing to light certain grand facts, on which theories are afterwards framed.  Lives of the Engineers The Locomotive. George and Robert Stephenson
Professor Galvani, however, exulting in his discovery, leaped to the conclusion that this electricity was not the same as that produced by friction. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
Who does not know of Newton's apple, Galileo's lamp, Galvani's frog? Essay on the Creative Imagination
Neither Harvey nor Galvani was honored by societies of distinguished men until the “slippery surface” of their “cultivated thought” was clutched and crushed by the power of a widely diffused truth. Buchanan's Journal of Man, March 1887 Volume 1, Number 2
A very interesting phase of the Italian university life of that time is revealed in two important incidents of Galvani's university career. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Whetted to eagerness by the previous conflict between him and Galvani, the scientific men of the age flung themselves with ardour upon the new discovery, repeating Volta's experiments, and extending them in many ways. Fragments of science, V. 1-2
The claims of Professor Galvani's frog rest upon a sure foundation of fact. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
Galvani acknowledged himself much indebted to his wife, for aid in those investigations which led to the discovery of the science that bears his name. The Young Maiden
Galvani and Volta were Italian scientists of the 18th century. The Romance of Words (4th ed.)
This was Galvani's expression for the dying away of the electrical influence upon the muscle. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Leyden Jar Galvani, in 1790, made the experiments which led to the generation of electricity by means of liquids and metals. Electricity for Boys
People regard Charles Lamb's story of the discovery of roast pig as a most extravagant and impossible fiction; but, really, Professor Galvani comported himself very much in the manner of that great discoverer. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
The ‘tontine’ was conceived by an Italian named Tonti; and another Italian, Galvani, first noted the phenomena of animal electricity or ‘galvanism’; while a third Italian, ‘Volta’, gave a name to the ‘voltaic’ battery. English Past and Present
When Galvani discovered that a frog's leg twitched when placed in contact with different metals, it could scarcely have been imagined that so apparently insignificant a fact could have led to important results. How to Get on in the World A Ladder to Practical Success
His father, however, was opposed to his entrance into religion, and so Galvani devoted himself to medicine at the University of Bologna, and at length became a professor of anatomy in his Alma Mater. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Indeed, most of those whose work has made them famous, down to and including Galvani, did so. Old-Time Makers of Medicine The Story of The Students And Teachers of the Sciences Related to Medicine During the Middle Ages
At first the facts and the theory of Galvani were equally accepted; and a grateful world insisted upon styling the new science, as it was deemed, "Galvanism." The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
His discovery slept for more than two thousand years until it awoke in the dreams of Galvani, and Volta, and Benjamin Franklin. Gov. Bob. Taylor's Tales
Did Galvani in examining the convulsions of his frogs, have any idea of the immense, the prodigious, the universal part which electric science was to perform in less than a century? The Arena Volume 4, No. 20, July, 1891
Galvani looked upon it as a sign from heaven of approval of some of his wishes, and applied for the hand of the fair Lucia. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Dr. Zamenhof, the inventor of Esperanto, had to battle for his wonderful international language against the same sort of ridicule, contempt, and stupid opposition which greeted Columbus, Galvani, and Stephenson. Bahá’u’lláh and the New Era
It was, therefore, as much the spirit of the time as the genius of the man, that made Galvani seize this new fact with eagerness, and investigate it with untiring enthusiasm. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
Like the spasms of Galvani’s frog, certain crude facts, about which you are skeptical, reveal the existence of natural forces as yet unknown. The Arena Volume 4, No. 19, June, 1891
Galvanism, one branch of electricity, took its name from Luigi Galvani, an Italian professor, who made great discoveries about electricity in the bodies of animals. Stories That Words Tell Us
It is almost needless to say, many of these experiments with lightning thus conducted by Galvani were not without an element of serious personal danger. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Galvani, the pioneer of electrical science, was scoffed at by his learned colleagues, and called the “frogs’ dancing master.” Bahá’u’lláh and the New Era
It was a sad day for the frogs of the Pope's dominions when Signora Galvani observed those two naked legs fly apart and crook themselves with so much animation. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
Galvani, however, had noticed that the maximum effect was produced when a metallic arc, of tin and copper, was brought into contact with the lumbar nerves and pedal extremities of a frog. The Arena Volume 4, No. 19, June, 1891
The twitching of a frog's flesh as it touched a certain kind of metal led Galvani to invent the electric battery. Wit, Humor, Reason, Rhetoric, Prose, Poetry and Story Woven into Eight Popular Lectures
This had never been determined, and Galvani succeeded in showing the presence of sparks exactly as if the animal were one of the apparatuses by which the sparks of frictional electricity are developed. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
A purely accidental circumstance led the physician Galvani, at Bologna, to trace the mysterious element, under conditions entirely novel, both of development and application. The Uses of Astronomy An Oration Delivered at Albany on the 28th of July, 1856
Whatever we may think of Galvani's philosophy, we cannot deny that he immortalized his name. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
From the experiments above mentioned of Galvani, Volta, Fowler, and others, it appears, that a plate of zinc and a plate of silver have greater effect than lead and silver. Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
In 1800, Volta, a physicist, also an Italian, threw further light on Galvani's discovery and produced what we know as the voltaic, or galvanic, cell. Cyclopedia of Telephony & Telegraphy Vol. 1 A General Reference Work on Telephony, etc. etc.
Finally, at the end of two years, influence was brought to bear on the new government and Galvani was allowed to accept his chair in the university without taking the oath of allegiance. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Colonel Voisin's arm was broken at the elbow, and Galvani was hit in the body. France in the Nineteenth Century
It was a severe affliction to the followers of Galvani and to the University of Bologna to have their darling theory of the nervous electricity so rudely yet so unanswerably refuted. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
Associates it with Italians and fluency generally, with Volta, Galvani, Marconi and so on. Mr. Britling Sees It Through
Galvani, an Italian physician, discovered, in 1786, that a current of electricity could be produced by chemical action. Cyclopedia of Telephony & Telegraphy Vol. 1 A General Reference Work on Telephony, etc. etc.
Galvani constantly refused to take the civil oath demanded by the decrees of the Cis-Alpine Republic. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Colonel Voisin and Galvani, being nearer to the shore, were immediately rescued. France in the Nineteenth Century
This was a decisive fact, and it silenced all but a few of the disciples of the dead Galvani. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
It is impossible to withhold this praise from Galvani and some of his followers.--E. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 14
Its twin Champollions came in Volta and Galvani. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 097, January, 1876
We have seen already what was Galvani's zeal and his love for the religion which he professed. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
He demands three piasters for his Alfieri, which he offers for sale and which is said to be as large as his Galvani. The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 Masterpieces of German Literature Translated into English. in Twenty Volumes
Instead of Galvani's frog or Volta's wet rag, the conductor is a solution of sulphuric acid, which Volta himself suggested and employed. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 122, December, 1867
Volta, Galvani, Morcel, Grove, Faraday, Franklin, and a host of others had laid a basis of laws and theories upon which he humbly and reverently mounted and arranged his great problem for the hoped-for solution. Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume II
Meantime, in 1791, Dr. Galvani discovered the twitching of a frog's muscle, due to electrical stimulus. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
Must I then defend Galvani in the eyes of posterity for one of the most beautiful sentiments that can spring from the nature of man? Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
When Galvani discovered that a frog’s leg twitched when placed in contact with different metals, it could scarcely have been imagined that so apparently insignificant a fact could have led to important results.  Self help; with illustrations of conduct and perseverance
Galvani, the discoverer of animal electricity, and Volta, the inventor of the galvanic pile, stimulated others to fruitful experiments in this branch of study. Outline of Universal History
In Galvanism several experiments, conducted by Professor Aldini, nephew of Galvani, are described in the 'Morning Post' for Jan. 6th, Feb. 6th, and Jan. 22nd, 1803. Byron's Poetical Works, Volume 1
Following this original observation, Galvani made a great many experiments on the effect of electric stimulus upon the nerves of frogs and other animals. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
On the pedestal there are two figures in bas-relief executed by the same sculptor, which represent religion and philosophy, the inspiring geniuses of Galvani's life. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
The groups broke up, the people rushed towards Via Galvani, questioning one another as they ran. The Saint
So, also, do the ideas of Galvani and the experiments and conclusions of all except Franklin, until we come to Faraday. Steam, Steel and Electricity
The name of Galvani and Volta had not previously been heard in those vast solitudes. Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America, During the Year 1799-1804 — Volume 2
This electricity of the eels and fishes had been named animal electricity, and Galvani concluded that all animals were capable of producing this electricity in the tissues of their bodies. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
Galvani became a member of Galeazzi's household, and finally having fallen in love with one of his daughters, won her father's consent to their early marriage. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
The 'tontine' was conceived by Tonti, an Italian; another Italian, Galvani, first noted the phenomena of animal electricity or 'galvanism'; while a third, Volta, lent a title to the 'voltaic' battery. On the Study of Words
The reader is requested to bear these names in mind; Galvani and Volta. Steam, Steel and Electricity
Prepared frogs, placed immediately on the body of a torpedo, experience, according to Galvani, a strong contraction at every discharge of the fish. Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America, During the Year 1799-1804 — Volume 2
This made Galvani's theory that the metals served merely as conductors seem improbable. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
The happiness in life that he thus prepared for himself became one of the often quoted exemplars of domestic felicity in Bologna, where Galvani's life was passed. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Whilst Volta's success was based on avoiding Galvani's error, his apparatus nevertheless turned out inadvertently to be a close counterpart of precisely that animal organ which Galvani had in mind when misinterpreting his own discoveries! Man or Matter
Galvani thought he saw the electric quality in the tissues of the frog. Steam, Steel and Electricity
An infinitely more genuine affair was my love for Friederike Galvani, the daughter of a mechanic, who was undoubtedly of Italian origin. My Life — Volume 1
In the meantime a chemical explanation of the phenomena observed by Galvani had been proposed in 1792 by Fabroni, a physicist of Florence. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
One of his favorite saints was St. Francis of Sales, the Archbishop of Geneva, the gentleman saint as he has been called, for whose charming personal character Galvani had a very devout admiration. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Goethe's paper was not destined to raise such a storm as soon followed Galvani's publication. Man or Matter
But in that year the key to the utility of electricity was found by one Galvani. Steam, Steel and Electricity
I remember nothing of the meeting with my relations and acquaintance beyond the melancholy visit to Friederike Galvani already mentioned. My Life — Volume 1
Several writers called attention to an apparent relation between Galvani's experiments and a phenomenon announced by J. G. Sulzer, in 1760. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
The most interesting quality of Galvani's scientific career is the thoroughly experimental character of all his researches into natural phenomena. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
And yet the fruit of Goethe's endeavours is not less significant than Galvani's discovery, for the progress of mankind. Man or Matter
Volta actually made this battery, then known as the Voltaic Pile, but he made it because of Galvani's discovery. Steam, Steel and Electricity
The thing takes us all the way back to Galvani, who was the first to observe and study animal electricity. The Dream Doctor
Since during this discharge the muscle was caused to contract, Galvani concluded that the purpose of this animal electricity was to produce muscular contractions. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
A glance at the life of Aloysius Galvani will illustrate how little the spirit of the revolution had to do with the rise of electricity and the first discussions of its relations to life. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Like many of his contemporaries, Galvani was drawn by the fascinating behaviour of the new force of nature to carry on electrical experiments as a hobby alongside his professional work, anatomical research. Man or Matter
In Galvani's kitchen there was an iron railing, and immediately above the railing some copper hooks, used for the purpose of hanging thereon uncooked meats. Steam, Steel and Electricity
The story goes that some edible frogs were skinned to make a soup for Madame Galvani, wife of the professor of anatomy in the University of Bologna, who was in delicate health. The Story of Electricity
Volta was apparently the first to suggest that the electricity which seemed to be generated in Galvani's experiments might have its source in the contact of the two metals. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
In some of these observations, Galvani was anticipating ideas that became current truth in electrical science only many years after his time. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Whereas Galvani had been rightly convinced by his earlier observations that the movement in the specimens represented a reaction to an electric stimulus from outside, he now changed his mind. Man or Matter
Both Galvani and Volta passed into shadow, when, in 1820, Professor H. C. Oersted, of Copenhagen, discovered the law upon which were afterwards slowly built the electrical appliances of modern life. Steam, Steel and Electricity
It is safe to say that neither Lavoisier, Galvani, Ohm, Regnault, nor Maxwell could have gotten the smallest appropriation through Congress to help make discoveries which are now the pride of our century. Side-Lights on Astronomy and Kindred Fields of Popular Science
Galvani seems to have concerned himself principally with the physiological processes which he believed gave rise to the electric charges, but physicists began immediately to seek for other sources of the electricity. Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86
Galvani took up this work with enthusiasm and began the study particularly of birds. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
And once again, as in Galvani's day, electricity fascinated the eyes of a man who was seeking for the land of the soul. Man or Matter
Afterwards Cavendish of England, Coulomb of France, Galvani of Italy, all brought new bricks to the pile. The Age of Invention : a chronicle of mechanical conquest
I had often seen the experiments on the nerves of a frog that had been freshly killed, how the electric current will make the muscles twitch, as discovered long ago by Galvani. The Silent Bullet
It was Volta who made the report of Galvani's wonderful discovery to the Royal Society of London, read on January 31, 1793. A History of Science — Volume 3
According to the more popular form of the history, Galvani was engaged in preparing some frog's legs as a special dainty for his wife, who was ill and who liked this delicacy very much. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Galvani published his discovery when the French Revolution had reached its zenith and Napoleon was climbing to power. Man or Matter
Frogs' legs must have hung by copper hooks from iron railings and twitched upon countless occasions before Galvani saw them. The World Set Free
Galvani was an easy, interesting talker, and he was one of the first who introduced experimental demonstrations into his lectures. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
In this letter he describes Galvani's experiments in detail and refers to them in glowing terms of praise. A History of Science — Volume 3
In this matter Galvani showed much courage as an inventive genius. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
We remember that Galvani was led to his observations by the results of Walsh's study of the electric fishes. Man or Matter
Galvani's work furnished the necessary stimulus to Volta, and then the real foundation of modern electricity was laid. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
Origins in electricity date from Franklin's work here in America and Galvani and Volta's observations in Italy. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
The story is told that Galvani was led to his discovery while preparing frogs' legs to make a broth for his invalid wife. A History of Science — Volume 3
Galvani had his duties as Professor of Anatomy to attend to, besides the obligations imposed upon him as a busy practitioner of medicine and surgery. Makers of Modern Medicine 2011-03-05T03:00:29.580Z
While Galvani clung to the view that in his own experiments the source of the electrical force lay within the animal bodies, Volta saw the fallacy of that. Man or Matter
He then conceived the idea of imitating with purely inorganic substances the set-up which Galvani had come upon by accident. Man or Matter
Volta's experiments were carried on at the same time as those of Galvani, and his invention of his pile followed close upon Galvani's discovery of the new form of electricity. A History of Science — Volume 3
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