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1) What did Albert Einstein Invent

The Einstein refrigerator is an Albert Einstein invention that uses green technology.
It was co-invented with Leo Szilard who was one of his physics students at Zurich
University. The invention was patented in 1930 and licensed to various companies
including Electrolux
Refrigeration was introduced in 1834, however there were concerns of poisoning
because faulty seals in the mechanical compressors would leak toxic gases such as
methyl chloride and sulfur dioxide.

2) Isaac Newton inventions


While he's best known for his work on gravity, Newton was a tinkerer, too, but more
with ideas than physical inventions. He did invent reflecting lenses for telescopes,
which produced clearer images in a smaller telescope compared with the refracting
models of the time. In his later years, he developed anti-counterfeiting measures for
coins, including the ridges you see on quarters today.

3)Marine Cure Invention


Madame Marie Curie famously snagged two Nobel Prizesfor Physics in 1903 with
husband Pierre and Henri Becquerel, and again in 1911 for Chemistry after discovering
radium and poloniumbut many other women have also been awarded the Physics,
Chemistry, and Physiology or Medicine Nobels, too.

4)

Galileo Galilei Invention Telescope

Galileo invented many mechanical devices other than the pump, such as the
hydrostatic balance. But perhaps his most famous invention was the telescope.
Galileo made his first telescope in 1609, modeled after telescopes produced in other
parts of Europe that could magnify objects three times.

5)

Louis Pasteur Invention

pasteurization
Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) He showed that food spoils because of microorganisms
and invented pasteurization, which was originally used to prevent wine and beer
from souring. If that wasn't enough, he also came up with a rabies vaccine.

6)

Alexander Graham Bell

telephone
Alexander Graham Bell, (born March 3, 1847, Edinburgh, Scotlanddied August 2,
1922, Beinn Bhreagh, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada) Scottish-born
American inventor, scientist, and teacher of the deaf whose foremost
accomplishments were the invention of the telephone (1876) and the refinement of
the phonograph

7)

Benjamin Franklin Inventions

The Franklin Stove


In Franklin's day, colonists staved off the chilly Pennsylvania winters by
stocking their roaring fireplaces with oak, hickory and maple logs carried
in from the surrounding countryside. Only a few decades after the city's
founding, however, the forests around Philadelphia were growing thin,
forcing Philadelphians to travel as much as 100 miles to find fuel -- not
an easy task on a horse and buggy. Franklin resolved to combat the
growing energy crisis by finding a more efficient way to heat colonial
homes.

8) James Watson invention


James Watson, one of the discoverers of the double helix. James Watson was
a pioneer molecular biologist who is credited, along with Francis Crick and
Maurice Wilkins, with discovering the double helix structure of the DNA
molecule

9)

Leonardo da Vinci invention

Science and inventions of Leonardo da Vinci. Paintings including the


Mona Lisa and The Last Supper. Many scientific drawings including The
Vitruvian Man. Leonardo da Vinci (14521519) was an Italian
polymath, regarded as the epitome of the "Renaissance Man", displaying
skills in numerous diverse areas of study.

10)

George Washington Carver Inventions

George Washington Carver was a prominent American scientist and


inventor in the early 1900s. Carver developed hundreds of products
using the peanut, sweet potatoes and soybeans. He also was a
champion of crop rotation and agricultural education

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