In a dim German laboratory in 1895, Wilhelm Röntgen’s accidental discovery of X-rays cracked open a new era in medicine, letting humanity see inside itself for the first time. In 1895, inside a ...
He was so modest and altruistic that in 1901, when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics, he donated the fifty thousand crowns of the prize to the university where he worked, refused to sell the ...
Accidents in medicine: The idea sends chills down your spine as you conjure up thoughts of misdiagnoses, mistakenly prescribed drugs, and wrongly amputated limbs. Yet while accidents in the examining ...
Romanze Atsuko Sahara, Violin John Lenehan, Piano Julius Röntgen, Composer Sonata for Violin and Piano Atsuko Sahara, Violin John Lenehan, Piano Julius Röntgen, Composer Phantasie Julius Röntgen, ...
Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (or Roentgen), a German physicist, was the first person to systematically produce and detect electromagnetic radiation in a wavelength range today known as X-rays, or Röntgen ...
IN a paper on secondary radiation from gases subject to X-rays (Phil. Mag. [6] v., p. 685, 1903), I described experiments which led to the conclusion that this radiation is due to what may be called a ...
One hundred and twenty years ago this weekend, physicist Wilhelm Röntgen found himself messing about at his home in Würzburg, Germany, with a Crookes tube and a sheet of paper painted with barium ...
PROF. RÖNTGEN'S remarkable discovery will materially affect our views concerning the relation between the ether and matter; but further experimental evidence is required before any opinion can be ...
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra No 1 Gregor Horsch, Cello Julius Röntgen, Composer David Porcelijn, Conductor Netherlands Symphony Orchestra Concerto for Cello and Orchestra No 2 David Porcelijn, ...