单词 | Luigi Galvani |
例句 | 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 |
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