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Charles Wheatstone

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Wheatstone, Charles

 

Born Feb. 6, 1802, in Gloucester, England; died Oct. 19, 1875, in Paris. English physicist and inventor. Fellow of the Royal Society of London (1836).

While engaged in the making of musical instruments, Wheat-stone carried out several ingenious acoustic experiments. In 1833 he explained the origins of the Chladni figures. In 1834 he became a professor at King’s College (London). Wheatstone proposed a method for measuring the duration of a spark produced by an electrical discharge (1834) and proved that the spark discharge spectra of metals uniquely characterize these metals (1835). In 1837, together with W. F. Cooke, he obtained a patent for the invention of an electromagnetic telegraph, and in 1858 he built the first usable automatic telegraph. In 1867 he proposed, independently of W. von Siemens, the idea of a self-excited shunt dynamo. Wheatstone constructed a mirror stereoscope, a photometer, a cryptograph, various automatically recording meteorological instruments, and other devices. He also proposed the bridge method of measuring resistance.

WORKS

The Scientific Papers. London, 1879.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Binocular stereopsis ("two-eyed solid seeing") was discovered in 1833, when Sir Charles Wheatstone invented the mirror stereoscope.
Based at his sumptuous Penllergare estate he also helped his friend Sir Charles Wheatstone with the first ever experiments in sub-marine telegraphy, carried out off Mumbles.
He discussed the long history of 3D, dating back to 1832 when Sir Charles Wheatstone created the rotating stereoscope, and including the boom in 3D movies of the 1950s.
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