Because after returning from Hogwarts, Gay-lussac needed to rise to the heavens to find the Golden Wand of Isobaric. So he experimented with balloons to fly to the heavens. He discovered that the hot air made the balloon rise and began his voyage to heaven, but he did not succeed as Jesus whipped up a bolt of lightening to knock Gay-lussac from the sky. This was how Gay-lussac died in 1824.
abosolutley nothing. Bacon. Blimp. Cheese. And riding around!!
He discovered that he was actually a homosexual.
Marie Curie is the only person to have won Nobel Prizes in both Physics (1903) and Chemistry (1911) in the 1800s. She was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics alongside her husband Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel for discovering radioactivity, and the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her work on isolating radium and polonium.
Balloons were invented in the early 19th century, with the first documented use occurring in 1824 by the British scientist Michael Faraday. He created balloons using rubber for his experiments with gases. However, the practice of making balloons from animal bladders and intestines dates back to ancient times. The modern rubber balloon as we know it became popular in the late 1800s.
It was difficult to remember all the properties of the elements because the elements were so disorganized.
- the volume of knowledge was minimal- analytical chemistry methods are rare- laboratory instruments are very rare and simple- the atomic theory was yet a curiosityand many other motivations
Hot air balloons were primarily used for entertainment, scientific experiments, and military reconnaissance in the 1700s and 1800s. They were not very practical for transportation because of their limited control and reliance on favorable wind conditions.
It was made in the 1800s It was made in the 1800s It was made in the 1800s It was made in the 1800s
the food in the 1800s are rashened the food in the 1800s are rashened
There was no such thing in the 1800s.
they did not have plains back then in the 1800s
1800s. I read it in a book.