Robert Hooke - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Robert Hooke
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Robert Hooke - ορισμός

ENGLISH NATURAL PHILOSOPHER, ARCHITECT AND POLYMATH
Hooke, Robert
  • Illustration from ''The posthumous works of Robert Hooke...'' published in ''[[Acta Eruditorum]]'', 1707
  • [[Anchor escapement]]
  • [[Christiaan Huygens]] by [[Caspar Netscher]]
  • Hooke's [[microscope]], from an engraving in ''Micrographia''
  • Hooke's drawing of a [[flea]]
  • Hooke's microscope
  • Hooke memorial plaque in [[Westminster Abbey]]
  • Portrait thought for a time to be Hooke, but almost certainly [[Jan Baptist van Helmont]]<ref name="Oesper" />
  • Engraving of a [[louse]] from Hooke's ''[[Micrographia]]''
  • Church of St Mary Magdalene]] at Willen, [[Milton Keynes]]
  • Drawings of the [[Moon]] and the [[Pleiades]] from Hooke's ''[[Micrographia]]''
  • cork]] by Hooke
  • [[Robert Boyle]] by [[Johann Kerseboom]], at [[Gawthorpe Hall]], Lancashire
  • Hooke noted the shadows (a and b) cast by both the globe and the rings on each other in this drawing of [[Saturn]].

Nathaniel Hooke (Jacobite)         
IRISH JACOBITE SOLDIER AND DIPLOMAT
Nathaniel Hooke (Jacobite baron); Nathaniel Hooke (Jacobite Baron); Baron Hooke of Hooke Castle; Nathaniel Hooke (diplomat)
Nathaniel Hooke (1664–1738) was a Franco-Irish Jacobite soldier, diplomatic envoy for the King of France and a Baron in the Jacobite Peerage of Ireland (as Baron Hooke of Hooke Castle, cr. 1708).
List of new memorials to Robert Hooke 2005–2009         
WIKIMEDIA LIST ARTICLE
New memorials to Robert Hooke 2005 - 2009; New memorials to Robert Hooke 2005 – 2009; List of new memorials to Robert Hooke 2005 - 2009; List of new memorials to Robert Hooke 2005 – 2009; List of new memorials to Robert Hooke 2005-2009
Robert Hooke, a major figure of 17th-century England, died essentially unmemorialized. With no immediate family, and with personal disputes with many members of the Royal Society, no memorials were erected in his honour on the occasion of his death.
Hooke Point         
POINT IN GRAHAM LAND, ANTARCTICA
Hooke Point () is a point near the head of Lallemand Fjord, in Graham Land, Antarctica. It was mapped by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey from surveys and air photos, 1946–59, and was named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee for Robert Hooke, an English experimental physicist and author of Micrographia, which contains one of the earliest known descriptions of ice crystals.

Βικιπαίδεια

Robert Hooke

Robert Hooke FRS (; 18 July 1635 – 3 March 1703) was an English polymath active as a scientist, natural philosopher and architect, who is credited to be one of the first two scientists to discover microorganisms in 1665 using a compound microscope that he built himself, the other scientist being Antoni van Leeuwenhoek in 1674. An impoverished scientific inquirer in young adulthood, he found wealth and esteem by performing over half of the architectural surveys after London's great fire of 1666. Hooke was also a member of the Royal Society and since 1662 was its curator of experiments. Hooke was also Professor of Geometry at Gresham College.

As an assistant to physical scientist Robert Boyle, Hooke built the vacuum pumps used in Boyle's experiments on gas law, and himself conducted experiments. In 1673, Hooke built the earliest Gregorian telescope, and then he observed the rotations of the planets Mars and Jupiter. Hooke's 1665 book Micrographia, in which he coined the term "cell", spurred microscopic investigations. Investigating in optics, specifically light refraction, he inferred a wave theory of light. And his is the first recorded hypothesis of heat expanding matter, air's composition by small particles at larger distances, and heat as energy.

In physics, he approximated experimental confirmation that gravity heeds an inverse square law, and first hypothesised such a relation in planetary motion, too, a principle furthered and formalised by Isaac Newton in Newton's law of universal gravitation. Priority over this insight contributed to the rivalry between Hooke and Newton, who thus antagonized Hooke's legacy. In geology and paleontology, Hooke originated the theory of a terraqueous globe, disputed the literally Biblical view of the Earth's age, hypothesised the extinction of species, and argued that fossils atop hills and mountains had become elevated by geological processes. Thus observing microscopic fossils, Hooke presaged the theory of biological evolution. Hooke's pioneering work in land surveying and in mapmaking aided development of the first modern plan-form map, although his grid-system plan for London was rejected in favour of rebuilding along existing routes. Even so, Hooke was key in devising for London a set of planning controls that remain influential. In recent times, he has been called "England's Leonardo".

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Robert Hooke
1. Then I began to recognise the handwriting of Robert Hooke.
2. But with minutes to spare, the auction was stopped and the lost manuscripts of legendary scientist Robert Hooke were saved.
3. Although the patterns are associated with Chladni, the effect had been noted a few decades earlier, by the English scientist Robert Hooke in 1665.
4. Filled with crabby italics and acerbic asides, the 520 or so yellowing and stained pages are the handwritten minutes of the Royal Society as recorded by the brilliant scientist Robert Hooke, one of the society‘s original fellows and curator of experiments.
5. Most of these graves were sold as family plots for four burials, but in most cases there is only one or two in them and there is room for more. ‘It‘s a complete change of our culture but we have been surprised by the uptake.‘ Not all of the plots in the cemetery, where England‘s 1'66 World Cup hero Bobby Moore and inventor Robert Hooke have been laid to rest, are up for ‘adoption‘. Sites can only be leased if there is room for another burial without disnames turbing the original remains and no living relatives object.