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单词 Robert Hooke
例句 Robert Hooke
Back in January 1684, after a meeting of the Royal Society, Halley had fallen into conversation with Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke about planetary orbits. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
Robert Hooke’s elder brother became a grocer in Newport, where he served as Mayor at one time, but hanged himself at the age of 46—we do not know exactly why. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
In Robert Hooke’s diary for 11 January that year, he writes that Halley had spoken to him ‘of going in Middleton’s ship to discover’. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
Robert Hooke was born on the stroke of noon on 18 July 1635, seven years before Galileo Galilei died. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
Robert Hooke evidently saw clouds perfectly clearly when he asked, ‘What is the reason of the various Figure of the Clouds, undulated, hairy, crisped, coyled, confus’d, and the like?’ The Invention of Science 2015-09-17T00:00:00Z
On the recommendation of Robert Boyle, the German-born Henry Oldenburg got the first job and Robert Hooke the second. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
Robert Hooke was a sickly child who was not expected to live. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
The three people who between them established both the scientific method itself and the pre-eminence of British science at the end of the seventeenth century were Robert Hooke, Edmond Halley and Isaac Newton. The Scientists 2003-10-21T00:00:00Z
He and his associate Robert Hooke wanted it to double as a huge static telescope, with an opening in its crown and lenses and mirrors employed to watch the heavens circling above. Porgy and Bess; the Prince Consort; Live Music Sculpture – review 2012-07-14T23:06:10Z
Meanwhile, Robert Hooke's more down-to-earth approach was governed by a determination "to facilitate and improve the present way of manual arts". The Arts of Industry in the Age of?Enlightenment by Celina Fox | Book review 2010-03-20T00:06:00Z
In 2002 I was completing a biography of the scientist, polymath and close friend of Sir Christopher Wren, Robert Hooke. Mistaken identity 2010-06-18T23:06:00Z
His English contemporary, Robert Hooke, published “Micrographia” in 1665, full of drawings of things too small to see with the naked eye, such as a flea’s amour-like plating and the compound eyes of a fly. All that is unseen 2014-08-14T04:00:00Z
Some of Newton's contemporaries, such as Robert Hooke, Christopher Wren, and Edmund Halley, had also made some progress toward understanding gravitation. College Physics for AP Courses 2015-08-12T00:00:00Z
In 1665, Robert Hooke used a microscope to look at a slice of cork from a plant. Miller & Levine Biology 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
The concept of a cell started with microscopic observations of dead cork tissue by scientist Robert Hooke in 1665. Anatomy and Physiology 2013-06-19T00:00:00Z
Researchers have carried on Robert Hooke’s legacy in the iconic London tower that he helped to design. Daily briefing: Cell that kicked off complex life grown in the lab for the first time 2020-01-15T05:00:00Z
Robert Hooke, an English scientist, first reported an oval on Jupiter in 1664. Jupiter’s Great Red Spot Isn’t Dead Yet 2019-11-25T05:00:00Z
Ball starts by retelling the story of human biology chronologically, beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, when English natural philosopher Robert Hooke coined the term ‘cell’. Brain in a dish, babies by design: what it means to be human 2019-05-12T04:00:00Z
Isaac Newton wrote to natural philosopher Robert Hooke that he had seen further than others only by standing on the shoulders of giants. The forgotten scientists who paved the way to the double helix 2019-04-15T04:00:00Z
In “Isaac’s Eye,” from 2013, Isaac Newton and his scientific elder Robert Hooke spar over the nature of light. Lucas Hnath Lets Actors Fight It Out Onstage 2019-04-15T04:00:00Z
Telescopes were opening up the heavens to study, and Robert Hooke and Antonie van Leeuwenhoek's microscopes were doing the same for the miniature world. Historians expose early scientists’ debt to the slave trade 2019-04-04T04:00:00Z
In his 1665 book Micrographia the British polymath Robert Hooke included his sketch of what looked like a flower garden on spindly stalks. Germs of Genius--a Masterpiece's "Microbiome" Can Spell Its Demise 2018-12-06T05:00:00Z
The son of a Bedfordshire blacksmith, he was friends with mathematician and scientist Robert Hooke, which is thought to be the key to Tompion's success as it opened doors to the latest technology. Clock by 'Father Time' sells for £230k 2018-10-15T04:00:00Z
Robert Hooke, a philosopher, tries cannabis; a man is encased in a diving bell and submerged in the Thames; men of science assemble in private to administer opium to dogs—and then dissect them. Pepys and Evelyn, chroniclers of the English Renaissance 2017-08-31T04:00:00Z
Giovanni Cassini, William Herschel, Robert Hooke, and Christiaan Huygens all tried their hand at drawing the planet’s basic features in the 17th and 18th centuries. What Mars Maps Got Right (and Wrong) Through Time
The class heard that two great scientists, Newton and Robert Hooke, argued about why light produced these colours, swapping notes about experiments. Peake practice - boosting primary science - BBC News 2016-06-22T04:00:00Z
This next plan is attributed to philosopher and surveyor Robert Hooke - but the authorship cannot be 100% verified. Great Fire: The grid system for London that never happened - BBC News 2016-02-02T05:00:00Z
Micrographia, by Robert Hooke, was the first book to illustrate insects and plants as seen through microscopes. Fire, plague and royalty - as seen by diarist Samuel Pepys - BBC News 2015-11-20T05:00:00Z
The Royal Society's Robert Hooke was given, by a friend, “a drug from India called Bangue”. A potted history : Nature : Nature Publishing Group 2015-09-22T04:00:00Z
It represents the scientific establishment in the UK, and its early members included Isaac Newton and Robert Hooke. The women who science forgot - BBC News 2015-06-18T04:00:00Z
The idea of tunnelling from one side of the planet to the other, commonly called a gravity train, was first proposed by British physicist Robert Hooke in a letter to Sir Isaac Newton. A (Faster) Journey To The Center Of The Earth 2015-03-27T04:00:00Z
The early British microscopist Robert Hooke coined the word cellas a result of his mid-17th-century observations of a thin section of cork. Human Genome's Spirals, Loops and Globules Come into 4-D View 2015-03-12T04:00:00Z
His competitor, who claimed to have invented the balance-spring-regulated watch first, was the London polymath Robert Hooke. How the world's first smartwatch was built 2014-09-27T04:00:00Z
Isaac Newton wrote it in a letter to fellow scientist Robert Hooke in 1676 - although he's not believed to have coined the phrase himself. A quiz on British history you can do in the car 2014-08-22T04:00:00Z
When two other scientists, Robert Hooke and Gottfried Leibniz, offered criticism or competed with Newton for claim over the revolutionary ideas of gravity and calculus, Newton pursued personal vendettas against them. Why Was Isaac Newton Such A Jerk? 2013-11-04T16:53:00Z
Robert Hooke, not long after, suggested that the fossil record would form the basis for a chronology that would “far antedate ... even the very pyramids.” How Science Figured Out the Age of the Earth 2013-10-20T14:15:00.407Z
July 18, 1635: Robert Hooke – The Last Virtuoso of Silly Science Freelance geologist dealing with quaternary outcrops interested in the history and the development of geological concepts through time. July 18, 1635: Robert Hooke - The Last Virtuoso of Silly Science 2013-07-18T21:15:04.867Z
According to the museum’s website, their collection includes “…microscopes from the earliest types used by Anton von Leeuwenhoek and Robert Hooke to the more elaborate ones of the nineteenth century.” History, Science and the History of Science 2013-04-26T16:15:10.750Z
The great “red spot” on Jupiter seems to have been originally discovered by Robert Hooke on May 9, 1664, with a telescope of 2 inches aperture and 12 feet focus. Astronomical Curiosities Facts and Fallacies 2012-03-27T02:00:18Z
These meshes 15 were first called "cells" by Robert Hooke, in 1667, because of their resemblance to the chambers of a honeycomb. Wood and Forest 2011-03-01T03:00:42.647Z
In 1664, the British physicist Robert Hooke put a flea under a microscope for the first time. Fleas? ?Feet? Unleash That Spectacular Leap 2011-02-10T05:21:48Z
A practicing physician, Young, as early as 1801, hit upon the true theory of the luminiferous ether, and of light and color, which nearly a century before had been discovered by Robert Hooke. The Popes and Science The History of the Papal Relations to Science During the Middle Ages and Down to Our Own Time
Robert Hooke is on the track of many marvels. A History of Science, Volume 5(of 5) Aspects Of Recent Science
The discovery was made by Robert Hooke in 1664 by accident, while he was following the comet of that year with his telescope. Pleasures of the telescope An Illustrated Guide for Amateur Astronomers and a Popular Description of the Chief Wonders of the Heavens for General Readers
The great improvement of giving to a telescope equatoreally mounted an automatic movement by connecting it with clockwork, was proposed in 1674 by Robert Hooke. A Popular History of Astronomy During the Nineteenth Century Fourth Edition
The celebrated Robert Hooke at first threw doubt upon this notion of Descartes, but he afterwards substantially espoused it. Six Lectures on Light Delivered In The United States In 1872-1873
The most distinguished of his opponents were Robert Hooke and Huyghens. The World's Greatest Books — Volume 09 — Lives and Letters
The seventeenth century, however, gives us three names, those of Borelli, Lana, and Robert Hooke, all of which take definite place in the history of flight. A History of Aeronautics
Robert Hooke, the son of a minister who died when he was thirteen, helped Boyle build his air pump. Our Legal Heritage : 600-1776 King Aethelbert - King George III
I. Robert Hooke's 'proof' of the non-reality of human concepts II. Man or Matter
The advantages of these telescope sights have been discussed under the article treating of Robert Hooke, but no such advantages were ever recognized by Hevelius. A History of Science — Volume 3
By referring to certain plates in this volume, which reproduce illustrations from Robert Hooke's work on the microscope, it will be seen that quite a high degree of effectiveness had been attained. A History of Science — Volume 2
The idea of applying a spring to the balance-wheel was not original with Huygens, however, as it had been first conceived by Robert Hooke; but Huygens's application made practical Hooke's idea. A History of Science — Volume 2
Robert Hooke developed the microscope, and took the first steps towards studying vegetable anatomy, publishing in 1667, among other results, the discovery of the cellular structure of cork. A History of Science — Volume 2
When we follow Goethe in this way he comes before us in characteristic contrast to Robert Hooke. Man or Matter
Who remembers now that Robert Hooke contested with Newton the discovery of the doctrine of universal gravitation? A History of Science — Volume 3
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