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  1. 14. Mai 2024 · Oliver Heaviside (born May 18, 1850, London—died Feb. 3, 1925, Torquay, Devon, Eng.) was a physicist who predicted the existence of the ionosphere, an electrically conductive layer in the upper atmosphere that reflects radio waves.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 13. Mai 2024 · Oliver Heaviside (1889) und Hertz (1890 a,b) führten dabei modernisierte Versionen der maxwellschen Gleichungen ein, die eine wichtige Grundlage für die weitere Entwicklung der Elektrodynamik bildeten („maxwell-hertzsche“ bzw. „heaviside-hertzsche“ Gleichungen). Dabei war es schließlich die von Heaviside gegebene Form ...

  3. Vor einem Tag · Oliver Heaviside (1850–1925) moved back in with his parents and would never again hold a “real” job, yet this twenty-something savant revolutionized electromagnetism by putting Maxwell’s abstract ideas to practical use.

  4. 24. Mai 2024 · Oliver Heaviside was born on May 18, 1850 in Camden Town, London, England. He caught scarlet fever when he was a young child and this affected his hearing. This was to have a major effect on his life, making his childhood unhappy, with relations between himself and other children difficult.

  5. 27. Mai 2024 · It was invented and applied at the end of the nineteen century by the English self-taught electrical engineer, mathematician, and physicist Oliver Heaviside (1850--1925). The Laplace transformation method is widely used in circuit analysis and mechanical problems, control systems and feedback study, and many other areas.

  6. 17. Mai 2024 · In 1888, Oliver Heaviside investigated the properties of charges in motion according to Maxwell's electrodynamics. He calculated, among other things, anisotropies in the electric field of moving bodies represented by this formula: [8]

  7. Vor 3 Tagen · They were first proposed by Oliver Heaviside in 1893 and then later by Henri Poincaré in 1905 as the gravitational equivalent of electromagnetic waves. Gravitational waves are sometimes called gravity waves, but gravity waves typically refer to displacement waves in fluids.