Micheal Faraday discovered the relationship between magnetic fields and electricity traveling in a wire. This led to the brilliant work of Tesla. He is the father of modern electricity. He invented the shaded pole electric motor. Still the heart of most systems today at the house or factory. Others shaped the finer details.
In 1752, Franklin is said to have performed the famous experiment of flying a kite during a thunderstorm, to which led to the discovery that lightning and electricity were somehow related. Modern scientists know this to be something of a tall tale, since being hit by lightning would have been fatal. It's likely that Franklin was actually insulated, away from the path of lightning.
Phenomenon associated with stationary or moving electric charges.
The word comes from the Greek elektron("amber"); the Greeks discovered that amber rubbed with fur attracted light objects such as feathers. Such effects due to stationary charges, or static electricity, were the first electrical phenomena to be studied. Not until the early 19th century were static electricity and electric current shown to be aspects of the same phenomenon. The discovery of the electron, which carries a charge designated as negative, showed that the various manifestations of electricity are the result of the accumulation or motion of numbers of electrons. The invention of the incandescent lightbulb (1879) and the construction of the first central D.C. power station (1881) by Thomas Alva Edison led to the rapid introduction of electric power into factories and homes. D,C, proved not to be the way to transmit power over any distance. A.C. from Teslas' inventions supplanted Edisons' equipment rapidly.
Michael Faraday, Luigi Galvani, Alessandro Volta, Andre-Marie Ampere, and Greg Ohm did work that provided the basis for modern electrical engineering.
Italian physician Girolamo Cardano returned to the subject of electricity in De Subtilitate (1550) distinguishing, perhaps for the first time, between electrical and magnetic forces. In 1600, the English scientist William Gilbert coined the modern Latin word 'electricus' from 'elektron', the Greek word for 'amber' which soon gave rise to the English word - electricity.
Otto von Guericke invented an early electrostatic generator in 1660. Other European pioneers were Robert Boyle, who in 1675 stated that electric attraction and repulsion can act across a vacuum. Stephen Grey, who in 1729 classified materials as conductors and insulators, and C. F Du Fay, who first identified the tow types of electricity that would later be called positive and negative.
i dont now
No one invented electricity. However if you are asking who discovered and proved electricity, this would be Benjamin Franklin.
Ben Franklin, but he didn't "discover electricity". He proved that electricity was in the natural world.
First of all Thomas Edison did not discover electricity. He discovered the light bulb! Benjamin Franklin discovered electricity you dumb head, and that was in 1752. >:(
it was discovered in Philadelphia Pennsylvania in so told 1762
Benjamin Franklin did not discover electricity, but simply discovered that lightning was electricity.
Discovered by Ben then created
Albert Edison is the one who discovered electricity.
im not surei think it was in GreeceBenjamin Franklinthe electricity was discovered in Greece
Ben Franklin discovered electricity. Not Albert Einstein.
we have no light! when electricity is not discovered!
The word "electricity" is the direct object in the sentence "Who discovered electricity?" The direct object receives the action of the verb, which in this case entails what was being discovered.
Benjamin Franklin discovered electricity
what was electricity used for when it was dicovered
He was born not discovered, He's not electricity.
No one invented electricity. However if you are asking who discovered and proved electricity, this would be Benjamin Franklin.
I think Hans Christian Oersted discovered that electricity and magnetism are related.
Benjamin Franklin discovered electricity. See on wikipedia about him.