Archimedes. He ran around naked shouting it after he divined the volume displacement properties of water.
No, you do not need an apostrophe before a scientist's name to show possession. Just add 's after the name to indicate that something belongs to the scientist.
Albert
He was quoting the exclamation attributed to Archimedes, who is said to have cried out "Eureka! eureka!" (I have found it! I have found it!), Eureka is Greek for "I have found it". Archimedes said it when he discovered how to use water displacement to test the purity of gold.
In 1866.
i think it was einstineIt was Archimedes.
Eureka
copernicus
Im sorry, what? The scientist that coined the term eureka? It is said that Archimedes did, but he said it slightly differently, along the lines of "I have done it, finally!" in Greek.
I'm thinking Archimedes, because he is famous for saying "Eureka I've done it!"
The famous scientist who shouted "Eureka! Eureka!" was Archimedes. According to legend, he made this exclamation when he discovered the principle of buoyancy while taking a bath. This momentous discovery led to the development of the Archimedes' principle, which explains the buoyant force experienced by objects immersed in a fluid.
People say eureka when they figure out something new. The word is mostly related to the scientist who discovered buoyancy.
Archimedes is the scientist who shouted "Eureka" while taking a bath. He made this exclamation when he discovered a method for determining the volume of an irregular object using water displacement.
Yelled Yelled Yelled Yelled Yelled Yelled Use ur brain stupid.
A soldier's name that was at the Eureka Stockade in 1954 is Private Felix Boyle. The Eureka Rebellion was fought between miners and the colonial forces of Australia.
This was called the Eureka Flag.
The most important tool for any scientist is curiosity and the desire to know. Without this, the scientist is a mere lab technician. The second most important tool for any scientist is patience. The media love to portray scientists being struck by inspiration and having a eureka moment, but even the most inspired scientist has spent long hours in thought and research preparing her mind for that eureka flash of insight.
Eureka is Greek for "I found it ! " ; an exclamatory remark ascribed to Archimedes . For oodles, Eureka refers to a CITY