Cheston Carlson called his invention of making dry copies electrophotography. Some time later, it was renamed to xerography, which is Greek for 'dry writing.'
Nova 6 does not exist. No one invented it.
Aluminium
Alfred Nobel's contribution to science was the invention of dynamite, a safer form of explosive compared to the unstable nitroglycerin. This invention revolutionized the construction and mining industries. Dynamite is related to chemistry as it involves the chemical reaction of nitroglycerin with an absorbent material to create a more stable and controllable explosive.
Alfred Nobel invented dynamite in the 1860s as a safer alternative to nitroglycerin, which was highly unstable. His invention was motivated by a desire to create a stable explosive that could be used for construction and mining. Nobel's invention of dynamite revolutionized the construction and mining industries by making explosive materials safer and more manageable.
The invention of gasoline is generally credited to Ignacy Lukasiewicz, a Polish inventor, who developed a process to distill kerosene from crude oil in the mid-19th century. Gasoline, a byproduct of this refining process, soon became a valuable fuel for internal combustion engines.
Cynthia Cheston is 5' 2".
Cynthia Cheston was born in Pasadena, in California, USA.
Ernest Cheston died on 1918-07-09.
Ernest Cheston was born on 1848-10-24.
Cheston Lee Eshelman was born in 1917.
Cheston Lee Eshelman died in 2004.
Kelly Cheston was born on June 30, 1972, in Roanoke, Virginia, USA.
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The Xerox photocopier was invented by Chester Carlson in the 1940s. Carlson developed the technique of electrophotography, which formed the basis for modern photocopying technology. Xerox Corporation later commercialized Carlson's invention.
Floyd Carlson was not connected with the invention of the Xerox copier. Chester Carlson developed the process that is now called xerography and that is the basis for the first copiers made by Xerox. The engineers and technicians of the Haloid Company, working with Carlson and scientists of the Battelle Memorial Institute, invented the first "Xerox machine." Haloid later changed its name to Xerox Corporation.