Electromagnetic Waves: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.''' thumb|center|Heinrich Hertz In 1888, [[Heinrich Hertz (1857-1894)|Heinrich ...)
 
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'''This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.''' [[Image:Hertz Portrait.JPG|thumb|center|Heinrich Hertz]] In 1888, [[Heinrich Hertz (1857-1894)|Heinrich Hertz]], in Karlsruhe, published his experimental validations of [[Maxwell's Equations|Maxwell's equations]] and forced a conceptual revolution in European theoretical physicists by showing that electromagnetic effects propagate at a finite speed. He also discovered the existence of [[Radio Waves|radio waves]].
'''This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.''' [[Image:Hertz Portrait.JPG|thumb|center|Heinrich Hertz]] In 1888, [[Heinrich Hertz (1857-1894)|Heinrich Hertz]], in Karlsruhe, published his experimental validations of [[Maxwell's Equations|Maxwell's equations]] and forced a conceptual revolution in European theoretical physicists by showing that electromagnetic effects propagate at a finite speed. He also discovered the existence of [[Radio Waves|radio waves]].  
 
[[Category:Fields,_waves_&_electromagnetics|Category:Fields,_waves_&_electromagnetics]] [[Category:Electromagnetics]] [[Category:Electromagnetic_fields]]

Revision as of 20:48, 16 December 2009

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Heinrich Hertz

In 1888, Heinrich Hertz, in Karlsruhe, published his experimental validations of Maxwell's equations and forced a conceptual revolution in European theoretical physicists by showing that electromagnetic effects propagate at a finite speed. He also discovered the existence of radio waves.