Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley - translation to γαλλικά
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Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley - translation to γαλλικά

ENGLISH PHYSICIST
Henry Gwyn-Jeffreys Moseley; Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley; Gwyn Jeffrey Moseley; H.G.J. Moseley; H. G. J. Moseley; Henry Mosely; HGJ Moseley; Henry G. Moseley; Amabel Nevill Moseley; H.G Moseley; Henry Gwyn Jeffries Moseley; Henry G. J. Mosely; Moseley, Henry
  • Moseley in the [[Balliol-Trinity Laboratories]] in 1910
  • Townsend Building]] of Oxford's [[Clarendon Laboratory]], commemorating Moseley's work on X-rays emitted by elements

Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley      
Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley (1887-1915), British physicist who deduced that the atomic number, of an element can be determined from the element's x-ray spectrum

Ορισμός

Barrowist
·noun A follower of Henry Barrowe, one of the founders of Independency or Congregationalism in England. Barrowe was executed for nonconformity in 1953.

Βικιπαίδεια

Henry Moseley

Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley (; 23 November 1887 – 10 August 1915) was an English physicist, whose contribution to the science of physics was the justification from physical laws of the previous empirical and chemical concept of the atomic number. This stemmed from his development of Moseley's law in X-ray spectra.

Moseley's law advanced atomic physics, nuclear physics and quantum physics by providing the first experimental evidence in favour of Niels Bohr's theory, aside from the hydrogen atom spectrum which the Bohr theory was designed to reproduce. That theory refined Ernest Rutherford's and Antonius van den Broek's model, which proposed that the atom contains in its nucleus a number of positive nuclear charges that is equal to its (atomic) number in the periodic table. This remains the accepted model today.

When World War I broke out in Western Europe, Moseley left his research work at the University of Oxford behind to volunteer for the Royal Engineers of the British Army. Moseley was assigned to the force of British Empire soldiers that invaded the region of Gallipoli, Turkey, in April 1915, as a telecommunications officer. Moseley was shot and killed during the Battle of Gallipoli on 10 August 1915, at the age of 27. Experts have speculated that Moseley could otherwise have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1916.