Heinrich Hertz - translation to English
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Heinrich Hertz - translation to English

GERMAN PHYSICIST
Heinrich Rudolph Hertz; Hertz, Heinrich Rudolf; H. Hertz; Heinrich Rudolf Hertz; Hertzian antenna; Heinrich Randolph Hertz; Hertz oscillator
  • Heinrich Hertz
  • dipole resonator]] consisting of a pair of one meter copper wires with a 7.5&nbsp;mm spark gap between them, ending in 30 cm zinc spheres.<ref name="Appleyard" /> When an [[induction coil]] applied a high voltage between the two sides, sparks across the spark gap created [[standing wave]]s of radio frequency current in the wires, which radiated [[radio wave]]s. The [[frequency]] of the waves was roughly 50 MHz, about that used in modern television transmitters.

Heinrich Hertz         
n. Heinrich Rudolph Hertz (1857-1894) fisico tedesco che per primo simulò onde elettromagnetiche
Heinrich Himmler         
  • Indian nationalist]] [[Subhas Chandra Bose]] in 1942
  • Gudrun]]
  • Himmler (at podium) with [[Heinz Guderian]] and [[Hans Lammers]] in October 1944
  • Himmler in 1929
  • Himmler and [[Rudolf Hess]] in 1936, viewing a scale model of [[Dachau concentration camp]]
  • Himmler visiting the [[Dachau concentration camp]] in 1936
  • Himmler, [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]], and other SS officials visiting [[Mauthausen concentration camp]] in 1941
  • [[Generalplan Ost]]}} exhibition, 20 March 1941
  • Himmler in 1945
  • 2007}}
  • Himmler's corpse after his suicide by [[cyanide poisoning]], May 1945
  • 1941}}
  • Gudrun]]
  • The stylised lightning bolts of the SS insignia were based on the [[Armanen runes]] of [[Guido von List]].
GERMAN NAZI POLITICIAN; LEADER OF THE GERMAN SS AND MAIN ARCHITECT OF THE HOLOCAUST (1900-1945)
Himler; Heinrich Himler; Heinrich Hemmler; Himmler, Heinrich; Himmler; Heinreich Himmler; Heinrich Luitpold Himmler; Heinrich himmler; Heinrich Hitzinger
Heinrich Himmler (1900-1945) capo delle SS, ufficiale in seconda di Hitler, instauratore dei campi di concentramento
Heinrich Heine         
  • Heine's mother, "Betty"
  • Marx]]'s ''Vorwärts'', featuring Heine's poem "''Die schlesischen Weber''"
  • Heine's grave in Paris
  • Delacroix]]'s ''Liberty Leading the People'', celebrating France's [[1830 revolution]]
  • Franz Kugler]]
  • Statue of [[Lorelei]]; the [[Lorelei Fountain]] – Heine Memorial – is located in the Bronx, New York City
  • First page of first edition of Heine's ''Buch der Lieder'', 1827
  • Heine on his sickbed, 1851
  • Heine, 1829
  • Heine, 1837
  • Heine's wife "Mathilde" (Crescence Eugénie Mirat)
  • Illustration by [[Max Liebermann]] for a 1920s edition of Heine's historical novel ''Der Rabbi von Bacherach''
  • Oppenheim]].
  • Plaque at the Nazi book burning memorial on Bebelplatz in Berlin, Germany. The plaque has a quote from Heinrich Heine's play Almansor (written 1821–1822). "Where they burn books, in the end they will also burn human beings" (Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen) about burning of Quran in Granada that was expected to be followed by burning humans (Muslims then Jewish) in 1500s.
  • Count von Platen, target of Heine's satire in ''Die Bäder von Lucca''
  • ''Reisebilder'', 1831
GERMAN POET, WRITER AND LITERARY CRITIC (1797–1856)
Almansor; Christian Johann Heinrich Heine; Christian Heine; Heinrich (Harry) Heine
Heinrich Heine (poeta tedesco dell"ottocento di origine ebraica)

Definition

kHz

Wikipedia

Heinrich Hertz

Heinrich Rudolf Hertz ( HURTS; German: [ˈhaɪnʁɪç ˈhɛʁts]; 22 February 1857 – 1 January 1894) was a German physicist who first conclusively proved the existence of the electromagnetic waves predicted by James Clerk Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism. The unit of frequency, cycle per second, was named the "hertz" in his honor.