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It was discovered by Henry Cavendish in 1766.
the fisr person to discover Hydrogen was Henery Cavendish, he discovered it in 1766.
The person who realized hydrogen was a discrete substance, different from ordinary air, was Henry Cavendish, in 1766. Robert Boyle was the first person to describe generating hydrogen, in 1671, but he did not know it was different from air.
Scientists had been producing hydrogen for years before it was recognized as an element. Written records indicate that Robert Boyle produced hydrogen gas as early as 1671 while experimenting with iron and acids. Hydrogen was first recognized as a distinct element by Henry Cavendish in 1766. The answers to when and who are probably lost in the mists of time anyway, but hydrogen was most likely discovered when early chemists/alchemists noted the gas being formed when metals were treated with acids. They'd have found that it burned in air to form water.
1766
Henry Cavendish
It was discovered by Henry Cavendish in 1766.
well i know the answer and her it is right.................................it was discovered in 1766,and a yound scientist named Henry Cavendish discovered it.
Henry Cavendish discovered Hydrogen in 1766
Henry Cavendish(1766).
1766,a young scientist named Henry Cavendish discoverd it.
in 1766 , in England Henry Cavendish was making cookies and had wound up making it
Hydrogen is not a man-made element but one that exists in nature naturally. It was discovered by Henry Cavendish in in 1766. So the question of "who made the hydrogen" atom is more philosophy then science.
He discovered and named Hydrogen in 1766
Yes, Henry Cavendish in 1766
In 1766 Henry Cavendish discovered the element hydrogen, which he called inflammable air, by observing the release of hydrogen gas when various metals were treated with strong acids. He knew that hydrogen was the same inflammable air that had been studied for more than 100 years by Robert Boyle and other scientists, but without anyone knowing that it was a actually an element. Further experiments resulted in his finding that water consists of a combination of hydrogen and oxygen atoms in definite proportions.
Henry Cavendish