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Lemonnier researching electrical speed, seen here conducting an experiment by sending a current from a Leyden jar through a wire approx 1,850 m long, he concluded that electricity propagated "instantaneously" in the wire. Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier aka Lemonnier, 1717 – 1799. French natural scientist. From Les Merveilles de la Science, published 1870.

Lemonnier researching electrical speed, seen here conducting an experiment by sending a current from a Leyden jar through a wire approx 1,850 m long, he concluded that electricity propagated "instantaneously" in the wire. Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier aka Lemonnier, 1717 – 1799. French natural scientist. From Les Merveilles de la Science, published 1870.
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Lemonnier researching electrical speed, seen here conducting an experiment by sending a current from a Leyden jar through a wire approx 1,850 m long, he concluded that electricity propagated "instantaneously" in the wire. Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier aka Lemonnier, 1717 – 1799. French natural scientist. From Les Merveilles de la Science, published 1870.
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Album / Universal Images Group / Ken Welsh
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Taille de l'image:
4843 x 3643 px | 50.5 MB
Taille d'impression:
41.0 x 30.8 cm | 16.1 x 12.1 in (300 dpi)