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Alessandro Volta: Batteries Not Included!

Maple Leaf Cet article est seulement disponible pour les commandes canadiennes.
This title is a part of the series Science Gossip! Series: Famous Scientists' Private Lives


Numéro de catalogue:  FI0044
Producteur:  Film Ideas
Sujet:  Histoire, Physique, Science
Langue:  Anglais
Niveau scolaire:  6 - 8, 9 - 12
Pays d'origine:  United States
Année du droit d’auteur:  2014
Durée:  7:00
Sous-titrage:  Oui


Demande de pré-visionnement

In 1745 Alessandro Volta was born in Italy, and received a thorough education in humanities and science.  He began to study a gas phenomenon occurring in swamps and discovered the flammable methane gas. When he captured some methane in a glass bulb, he was able to light it with an electric spark.  This first gas lamp was one of the first practical uses of electricity. In 1790 Galvani, another Italian scientist, had discovered a curious phenomenon while dissecting a frog: its hind legs kicked when he touched them with his metal scalpel.  He thought he had discovered animal electricity, a mysterious force that remains in animals after death.  Volta set out to prove him wrong, believing it was the reactions of two adjacent metals in Galvani’s experiments that activated the legs. In 1799, after 10 years of study, Volta revealed the battery, his invention that consisted of silver plates interspersed with copper plates separated by cardboard and immersed in salt water. It generated a continuously flowing electric current, and became the foundation for electrical science research for centuries. Today’s batteries use more efficient and durable materials, but they generate a serious contamination problem for the environment. In 1827, Volta’s own batteries ran out! In his honor, the unit for measuring electrical potential was called a volt.  


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