If you are talking about the Pauli Exclusion Principle, then it would be Wolfgang Pauli. However, Pauli is Austrian.
I believe they are made in Miami,Fl.So much for the Swiss name!!!
Mold grows a lot quicker on Swiss than on Cheddar.
The Swiss city that also bears the name of a lake is Geneva.
Switzerland is very mountainous and therefore hard to invade and occupy. This gave the Swiss the opportunity to play a neutral role in many European conflicts. It also made Swiss banks a fairly safe place to deposit money. The Swiss encouraged foreign deposits by promising secrecy, so quite a few shady characters had Swiss bank accounts. The Swiss paid little or no interest on these secret accounts and actually loaned money to Swiss businesses at very low interest rates. French, Italian, English and Switzer Deutsch are all official languages and many Swiss speak all of them.
No
Swiss mathematician and physicist Daniel Bernoulli discovered what is known as the Bernoulli effect, or the Bernoulli Principle.
The correct answer to this question is Daniel Bernoulli
Nassim Haramein is a Swiss born physicist known for his new take on the structure of the universe
A very smart theoretical physicist. He worked also in the Swiss patent office and was also a teacher
Leonhard Euler is known as a Swiss mathematician and physicist. He made many famously known accomplishments in the area of calculus and graph theory.
Albert Einstein was primarily a theoretical physicist, not an inventor. However, during the time he worked in the Swiss Patent Office he did invent a few small items.
Leonhard Euler was a Swiss mathematician and physicist. He introduced the majority of today's mathematical terminology and is considered one of the best mathematicians. He lived from 1707-1783.
Albert Einstein was primarily a theoretical physicist, not an inventor. However, during the time he worked in the Swiss Patent Office he did invent a few small items.
Huldrych Zwingli was a Swiss theologian and humanist philosopher who rejected the principle of transubstantiation and believed in the supreme authority of the Bible over the clergy. Zwingli was a key figure in the Protestant Reformation, advocating for a more simplified and biblical form of Christianity.
That equation is associated with Albert Einstein. Here's an actual quote from him. I love this story, and I hope nobody will feel that it should be deleted from this answer: When he published his first paper on Relativity, Einstein wrote to a colleague: "If I am right, the Germans will say I am a German, the Swiss will say I am Swiss, and the French will say I am French. If I am wrong, the Swiss will say I am French, the French will say I am German, and the Germans will say I am a Jew."
Daniel Bernoulli, a Swiss mathematician. Bernoulli's principle states that as the speed of a moving fluid increases, the fluid's pressure decreases.
Depending on context, Swiss can be translated as:schweizerischeidgenösischSchweizer (a Swiss man)Schweizerin (a Swiss woman)die Schweizer (the Swiss)